Color Blindness Tools — Color Name & Hue
- Posted by Daniel Flück on January 11th, 2008 filed in Tools
- 1 Comment »
I’m proud to announce my first color blindness tool. Up to now Colblindor was a growing resource of information about color blindness. With this step I would like to go further and start offering tools related to color blindness.
Those tools shall aim for the following two goals:
- Help colorblind people to accomplish certain tasks.
- Achieve a better understanding of color blindness among non colorblind people.
My first tool which I am releasing today is called Color Name & Hue and it will help you to categorize colors into the main hues Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet, Brown, Black, Grey, and White.
This tool offers you the following possibilities to find a certain color: either you just browse the color space with the sliders or you enter RGB, HSB or Hex values.
Color Name & Hue will find the closest matching named color among a list of 1640 colors. It will also match this color to its corresponding main hue.
By the way, I compiled the list of colors out of different sources which can be found on the web. Unfortunately not everybody agrees about certain hues so it wasn’t an easy task to find the correct hues. If you find any colors which are definitely matched to the wrong hue just let me know.
I hope you like the tool and it would be interesting to learn in which situations you can use it.
A Gift for the Colorblind
- Posted by Daniel Flück on December 2nd, 2007 filed in Children
- 6 Comments »
Nick is wrapping the project up. All of the shirts were spoken for and the project was a great success for him. I’m sorry if you couldn’t get one of the shirts for your son or daughter.
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Greetings,
My name is Nicholas and I am a grad student at the School of Visual Arts MFA design program in New York City. I have created a color blind pattern for t-shirts that I hope to distribute to young children. The shirts are free for children who have recently found out or have known for some time that they are colorblind. In my own experience I have found that those with no deficiency in color vision often misconceive color blindness as a warped perception of reality. Such is not the case.
So, I have made these shirts to celebrate color blindness and the magical world that the color blind see. In this example, an image of a forest is clear to all, however the unicorn within the forest is only visible to those with normal vision. Actually seeing a unicorn is of course much sillier than being color blind. That which the colorblind see in this world may be more spectacular then one could ever imagine.
This is a one time extreme limited run of 50 shirts with a six color screen print. Sizes run youth medium - adult large. Please specify for whom the shirt is and what size. Once the 50 are gone, I will never print them again.
Also, if you could send a photograph (any quality and doesn’t even need a face) of someone wearing the shirt once received it would be much appreciated.
Improving the Readability of Public Transport Maps for Colorblind Travelers
- Posted by Daniel Flück on November 7th, 2007 filed in Publications
- 1 Comment »
A group of students from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology decided to make a project work about color vision deficiency. In detail they developed guidelines on how to colorize bus or subway maps taking color blindness into account.
The interdisciplinary group had ten male colorblind test persons and based their findings on the maps of London, Oslo and Trondheim.
First of all the test persons were examined on the type and the severity of their color blindness. That for the students used a set of Ishihara plates and a Lanthony arrangement test.
After that the examination was split into several different tasks like…
- …testing which colors look the same to each test person,
- …which are the problem areas of the maps,
- …and also which colors would the most likely be able to distinguish on a map.
The columns of the table to the right show the different bus line colors of Trondheim. The rows are linked to the test persons and the different marks show line colors, which looked the same to the person under test.
It is very interesting to see that firstly, every person had at least one pair of problem colors, and secondly that they are often the same but sometimes can be quite different.
In the end of the report the study group formulates a set of guidelines which should be followed to increase the readability of public transport maps.
- Make stylized maps without to much geographical information. This will ease the readability since it makes it more easy to separate the different lines.
- Use white frames around the lines since this helps keeping the colors invariable and reduces the confusion when the lines intersect.
- Use thick lines. Through this the eye can interpret the color better.
- Mark the lines with numbers, especially when the line intersects with others and splits.
- Variate the intensity of the colors. The intensity differences are also visible for persons who are colorblind. Choose therefore to use colors with distinct intensity differences. Specially when using similar colors and color combinations, which some people could see as one color. For example:
- Brown, red/pink, green
- Grey, red/pink, green
- Blue, purple, red, pink, green
“Our opinion is that these guidelines will make public transport maps more easily accessible for people with color blindness, and should be possible to implement without reducing the readability for people with normal vision.”
If you are interested the report is available only in Norwegian as PDF download: Fagrapporten.pdf (8MB).
See also: Japan’s Public Facilities Making Life Easier for Colorblind and Subway Maps in general.
How does a Total Colorblind Child’s Future look like?
- Posted by Daniel Flück on November 5th, 2007 filed in Children
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Total color blindness—also known as complete color blindness or monochromacy and with the scientific name achromatopsia—is very uncommon. Less than one out of 30′000 people is affected by this special form of color vision deficiency.
What if your son or daughter suffers from complete color blindness, how might a possible future look like to your child?
I just came to know my sister’s son is total colorblind. He is 12 years old.
- Since he is total colorblind, does it mean he sees all color in monochrome gray shades or can he see some of the colors?
- What kind of profession should he pursue since he is total colorblind?
- Is it fine for him to get work as a software engineer or a doctor?
- Is it fine for him to drive when he grows up?
Before answering the above four questions I would like to say a few words about complete color blindness. A young baby suffering from monochromacy will start to twinkle in bright light. Why? Because all cones which are needed for color vision and day vision are absent and therefor vision is solely based on rods. This receptors can’t see colors and are responsible for night vision. This means they are very sensitive to bright light which additionally leads to very poor visual acuity.
This means, if your child really suffers from complete color blindness he or she…
- …needs strong sunglasses in normal daylight.
- …has poor visual acuity.
- …also suffers from nystagmus (nervous eyes).
1. Does he see all color in monochrome gray shades or can he see some of the colors? If you are suffering from achromatopsia you can’t perceive any colors beside black, white and fine tuned shades of gray. There is no feeling or sensation of color at all.
2. What kind of profession should he pursue since he is total colorblind? Unfortunately complete color blindness can be a huge handicap in many professions. But there are many people who showed that also a huge variety of jobs can be done with this deficiency, like Dr. Nordby an internationally recognized vision scientist, lecturer, and writer. You can find more personal job stories in the book Living with Achromatopsia.
3. Is it fine for him to get work as a software engineer or a doctor? To work as a software engineer should cause no insurmountable hurdles. Of course you might need an extra large display and adjust some color settings. But programming is a logical and not a color related job. To work as a doctor could be tougher. A doctor needs good eyesight during his work and also needs to make decisions based on colors. There might be some work which can be done as a complete colorblind person, but it won’t be easy at all.
4. Is it fine for him to drive when he grows up? Unfortunately I have to tell you that you can’t drive when you are suffering from achromatopsia. The handicaps I described above are just to big to be able to safely drive a car.
Please make sure that you also visit the very comprehensive site from the Achromatopsia network. They are also offering two books as pdf download with a lot of specific information on this very special type of complete color blindness: Understanding and Coping with Achromatopsia and Living with Achromatopsia.
Seekey – Colorblinds See Otherwise Invisible Colors
- Posted by Daniel Flück on October 31st, 2007 filed in Tools
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Are you red-green colorblind? Do you have a handy tool in your pocket which helps you in critical situations to tell certain colors apart? If not you might like to learn more about a tool called Seekey, which exactly can do that for you.
Seekey is a little tool consisting of two different light filters: a red and a green filter. Looking through them will change the way you perceive the color of the object you are focusing on. Based on the difference in color perception through the filters and without filter you can guess the correct color.
Let us have a look at a little example: It is always very tough for a red-green colorblind like me to spot the nice orange blossoms in our green garden. Those two colors just look so similar to my eyes. With Seekey this changes. Looking at the blossoms through the red filter, they get lighter while the surrounding green darkens. The green filter changes the effect and lets all the green lighten up compared to darker blossoms.
There are several color keys coming along with Seekey. Through those color keys you will learn how the color perception changes when looking through one of the two filters. The table to the left shows you an example for the colors red, green, orange and brown.
Kenneth Allblom is the inventor of Seekey. He is living in Sweden and distributing the tool either directly through his web page or otherwise it can be bought at opticians and in certain boat equipment stores in Great Britain, France, Sweden, Finland, Germany, New Zealand and Japan.
A study at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm Sweden even showed that the Seekey tool will assist red-green color deficient persons to achieve an 86% improvement at the Ishihara test for color blindness.
Seekey is a handy tool which can help every red-green colorblind person. Visit the Seekey homepage directly to get more detailed information about this little helper.



