faberryman
Member
Part of the problem with the discussion here is that, yes, you have representative spectrograms of the dye sensitivity of the film in question, but you DON'T have any representative spectrograms of the light reflecting off this or that flower or sample of fabric, since there can be a multitude of potential variations of those, which the human eye is capable of differentiating in a different manner than the given film itself, or even differently from pollinators like insects and their own kind of vision, which is really the priority with blossoms, and not our pictures.
Spectrograms and insect vision aside, you would still expect purple flowers to look purple. Of course, no film is perfect.
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