This will naturally cause things like grass, leaves, and other green objects to look more muted/ desaturated, aka more "greyscale." However, this also means that when things are lacking color by themself, aka you stare at a grey sidewalk, you are more easily going to pick up different tones/ shades of that greyscale. cyan/gray: All shades of blue-green look truly colorless to me. brown/green/red: Please, don't talk about red animals in the forest.
I suppose there are many more shades and colors I can't really see. But this is a list of colors which I often come across and have big problems to identify and classify. Why does GREY look green to me? Grey is the current trendy neutral because earth tones feel dated and overused.
Gray has three undertones. It's either blue, green or violet. And this is why your gray wall might look blue, green or purple, because you missed the undertone before you painted the walls.
How do I know if I'm color blind? Does classic gray look green? In a world of white paint colors, Benjamin Moore Classic Gray (OC-23) is a soft gray color that reads white in rooms where white paint colors just don't look right. The opponent-process theory further clarifies why the afterimage appears in a complementary color.
This theory suggests that our visual system processes color in opposing pairs: red-green, blue-yellow, and black-white. When one color in a pair is stimulated, the other is inhibited. Color blindness: One of the most common reasons for seeing a green tint in your vision is color blindness.
Color blindness is a condition in which you have difficulty distinguishing between certain colors. The most common form of color blindness is red-green color blindness, which means you have trouble differentiating between red and green hues. Grey has three undertones, green grey, blue grey and violet grey.
Once you learn my system, grey is no longer just grey. Get your greys right here. I have great color acuity because I was trained to see the nuances when I went to art school, and I've noticed that my eyes see color a little differently.
One eye sees a slight red cast, and the other sees a slight green cast. Color vision comes from "cones" which are nerve endings on the retinas. It's like sea-green I guess, which to me at least looks like a bluish green, not very blue but tinted if that makes sense.