u/Cazz23

Colorblind palette Update: Should be better for protanopia and deurtanopia. Still waiting to hear from another tritanopic person to double check if its fine.

Colorblind palette Update: Should be better for protanopia and deurtanopia. Still waiting to hear from another tritanopic person to double check if its fine.

Check my previous post for more info on how i designed it. Tldr: each collumn is the same brightness, so if you wanna make it monochrome friendly then just choose 1 color per column. Otherwise all colors should be fair game.

If you wanna stay updated, i have a codeberg repo where i put the most up to date version.

Any feedback is welcome, its never too late to make something better. Im particularly looking for feedback from a someone with tritanopia. My blue-yellow vision is the worst part of my color vision and i dont really have an issue with this palette, so in theory i think it should be okay, but i wanna check with a fully tritanopic person. I might end up reducing the green in 5 a tad bit to make it a tad farther from gray.

This is prolly the last post ill make here about this.

u/Cazz23 — 18 hours ago

Made a revision to my colorblind palette. any feeedback?

For the most part this palette is somewhat fullproof for the most common colorblindnesses but i did a bit of tweaking since the last version so maybe something doesnt work aswell.

if you wanna make it monochrome friendly you can just choose 1 color per collumn as i have made the collumns all have the same brightness. since we humans have both brightness and color sensing cells this is a actuallyl able to be done.

The main concern point i thinkk in theory is color 10. That has been the trickyest color to get usable.

I myself am colorblind, which i have about general 60% colorvision. No particularly red or green colorblind just a bit less of everything. So i dont particularly trust my own opinions about what looks good here and there.

A slight summary on how this palette works.

basically its kidna like a 3d sudoku.

if you remove any given r or g or b value, and then scale it for brightes (or not, ideally it should work for both brightness and non brightness scaled), then the there should be no colors that are too close. And you gotta scale how close something can by by how sensitive our eyes are to a given color in general.

Edit: Yes, before people ask, i have previously tested this with other colorblind people. Some people have previously been really hostile at me trying to tell me i know nothing and you cant make colorblind palletes for more then one type of colorblindness. It was really insulting lmao and im just tryna help people. As i think accecibility is really important.

u/Cazz23 — 1 day ago