That's a...question alright! Okay...it really depends on the fabric is my guess. Or the lighting. That is my best guess, and I'm sorry if its wrong!
:D That's a...question alright! Okay...it really depends on the fabric is my guess. Or the lighting. That is my best guess, and I'm sorry if its wrong!
:D no
when someone sees an orange shirt there is a logical explenation (usless your coclor blind that's differenet)well a white light hits the shirt white lights have many different colors and when it hits the shirt all the colors reflect but manly the orange light reflects the most
you could keep it neutral with a white shirt.
Red and orange light probably have similar wavelengths so, in poor light, red seems to be orange. To be honest, I thought that orange looked red in poor light. If it appears orange, then why in the world do you call it a "red" shirt ?
A white shirt is, basically, reflecting all colours of the electromagnetic spectrum which it is exposed to. So for white light it is reflecting red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. If you only expose it to red light (with a wavelength of ~650nm), it will reflect only that light. Therefore, the white shirt will appear red.
A white shirt appears white in white light because it reflects all wavelengths of visible light equally. This means that the shirt does not absorb any particular color wavelength, resulting in the perception of white.
A white shirt reflects light while a black one absorbs it.
no colors is absorbed by a black shirt but instead it reflects all the colors in the spectrum of light while white shirt absorbs all the color in the spectrum of light.
All colors of visible light are being reflected by a white shirt when viewed in white light. White is the combination of all colors in the visible spectrum, so when white light hits the shirt, all colors are reflected back to your eyes, giving it the appearance of being white.
A light orange.
A red shirt appears red because it absorbs most colors of light and reflects red light back to our eyes. White light contains all colors of light, so when white light hits a red shirt, the shirt absorbs most colors and reflects red light, making it appear red.
When white light strikes a red shirt, the shirt absorbs most of the colors in the light spectrum except for red. The red color is reflected off the shirt's surface, which our eyes perceive. This is why the shirt appears red to us.
A white shirt will appear green under a green disco light because objects reflect the light projected onto them. Since the shirt is white, it will reflect the green light predominantly, giving it a green appearance.