> From: PDML [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of steve harley
> Sent: 23 January 2013 21:14
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: Re: People like bright (saturated) colors
> 
> on 2013-01-23 10:31 Igor Roshchin wrote
> > I just looked over the first few pages of the most popular photos on
> > 500px.com:
> > http://500px.com/popular
> > Almost all of them (if not all) have saturated colors (or
> > high-contrast
> > B&W)
> 
> that's a good observation
> 
> 
> > I am sure psychologists wrote papers and books on this topic, I
> didn't
> > even try to google it, but I suspect the reason is simple: bright
> > colors are easier for "consumption", the same way as sweet
> > foods/drinks attract attention of adults and especially kids. In a
> > similar way, many people start drinking wines by liking the sweet
> ones.
> 
> one explanation is we are so overstimulated that everything competes
> for our attention
> 

None of these things are really new. 

> * in beer, over-hopped "imperial IPA" with 9-10% alcohol is the current
> rage
> 

absinthe in fin-de-siecle France?

> * on TV, "reality" shows are packed with outrageous behavior,
> humiliation and extreme emotional states
> 

So is all of literature

> * porn sets the sexual standard for today's youth
> 

The critic John Ruskin was unable to consumate his marriage when he
discovered that his wife had pubic hair - his only experience of bare nekkid
ladies had been from 'art'

> * giant lips, breasts, and even buttocks are sought after
> 

The Willendorf Venus is about 24,000 years old

> * Facebook drives the words "friend" and "like" into increasing
> meaninglessness
> 

Awesome!

Other words will mutate or be coined to fill the gaps

B


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