| | | | | In lugnet.general, Alfred Speredelozzi wrote:
> I imagine that the "sand" colors will not make the list. Not that it is
> terribly important. Actually, if this new grey schema is really here to
> stay, then I would expect Lego to adjust the "sand" colors to match. They
> really so stand out oddly with the new greys, probably because they are
> color variants that involve the old greys.
You think so? In my own comparisons, I've found that there are only five opaque
colors that really go well with dark-bley (not counting light-bley and
light-light-bley, of course), which are black, dark-blue, sand-blue, sand-green,
and sand-purple. Every other color is too warm, including blue.
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| In lugnet.general, David Laswell wrote:
> In lugnet.general, Alfred Speredelozzi wrote:
> > I imagine that the "sand" colors will not make the list. Not that it is
> > terribly important. Actually, if this new grey schema is really here to
> > stay, then I would expect Lego to adjust the "sand" colors to match. They
> > really so stand out oddly with the new greys, probably because they are
> > color variants that involve the old greys.
>
> You think so? In my own comparisons, I've found that there are only five opaque
> colors that really go well with dark-bley (not counting light-bley and
> light-light-bley, of course), which are black, dark-blue, sand-blue, sand-green,
> and sand-purple. Every other color is too warm, including blue.
Of course, at some level, its a matter of opinion, so maybe I am in the
minority. However, I have heard discussion from people who seem to be a lot
more interested in colors than I, that the sand colors were mixes of the base
color and original lt grey. That doesn't make it true, but that is what I
heard. Honestly, light bley doesn't look different enough to me with any other
color except old light grey.
-Alfred
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| In lugnet.general, Alfred Speredelozzi wrote:
> Of course, at some level, its a matter of opinion, so maybe I am in the
> minority. However, I have heard discussion from people who seem to be a lot
> more interested in colors than I, that the sand colors were mixes of the base
> color and original lt grey.
If that's true, it would still mean that the three sand-colors I cited are mixes
of grey and a color from the cool end of the spectrum, much like the bleys. I
actually held dark-bley up against all three of those colors just to confirm
that they don't actually look all that bad together. And yet that still doesn't
comfort me much in light of the fact that dark-bley looks horrible with white
and blue.
> Honestly, light bley doesn't look different enough to me with any other
> color except old light grey.
I really only bothered to compare dark-bley because it even looks odd by itself.
However, true light-grey is reportedly the second most common color in LEGO
history, even though it's not one of the original five colors. Even if that's
the only color that doesn't go with light-bley (it doesn't look very good with
true dark-grey either), that's still pretty significant.
| | | | | | |