No it's just dark wash jeans are more formal and light wash are more casual so they might be more lose since they are meant to be more casual
loser than girl skinny jeans. you don't want to show off your body
Dark wash jeans are considered more dressy tha nlighter washes.
Dark is the absence of light. Dark is nothing itself other than the absence of light.
dark object absorb more light than light colors
They have a lower "albedo" if you will. Light objects reflect light at a greater rate than dark objects which absorb it. This is why dark objects heat up more than light ones.
Dark rocks will absorb more radiant heat than light rocks, for the same reason that any dark object absorbs more heat than an equivalent light object. Light objects appear "light" to us because they reflect more light than objects which appear dark. Dark objects appear dark because they absorb more light and reflect less. However, dark objects will radiate more heat that light objects. Actually, dark rocks do NOT absorb more radiant heat than light rocks. Nor do they radiate more heat than light rocks. Dark rocks DO absorb more LIGHT than light rocks and they then radiate this light at heat. Light rocks reflect the light rather than absorb it and therefore do not radiate as much heat. If you put a light rock and a dark rock next to a HEAT source, the amount of heat absorbed will be related to the makeup of the material rather than to the color.
Mosquitoes are more attracted to dark colors than light colors.
dark colors
Yes. They actually grow faster in the dark than in the light.
As with just about everything, the sun will heat dark-coloured sand faster than light coloured sand. Dark colours absorb heat better than light colours.
Dark colors appear to absorb less light than light colors because they reflect more light back into our eyes. Light colors reflect a larger portion of light that hits them, while dark colors absorb more of it, making them appear darker. This difference in light reflection results in our perception of dark colors as absorbing less light.
Dark colors absorb more light energy than light colors, which is then converted into heat energy through a process called absorption. This heat energy increases the temperature of dark colors more quickly than light colors, leading to the perception that dark colors warm up faster.