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Author Topic: What sound does the color blue make?  (Read 307 times)
karaschoen (OP)
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October 02, 2017, 10:17:08 PM
 #1

My cousin has synesthesia and says she knows.
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halaby_avi
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October 02, 2017, 10:37:57 PM
 #2

brrrrrrrppppppp blopblopblopblop
 no but seriously, to me it's a nice cool wattery sound. Like waves on the beach + cotton candy on a 55 degree day.
Make sense?
gbosah
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October 02, 2017, 11:37:45 PM
 #3

Go ask an alien
nursahath07
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October 03, 2017, 04:14:53 AM
 #4

this question belongs to another being who lived in another planet
Swinging Phallus
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October 03, 2017, 05:54:09 AM
Last edit: October 03, 2017, 06:05:02 AM by Swinging Phallus
 #5

The color blue in the visible spectrum is about 450–495 nm in wave length and 606–668 THz in frequency of light. if THz is 10¹² Hz, just tune it down by halfing it to remain in the same octave.
Swinging Phallus
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October 03, 2017, 06:03:11 AM
 #6

You've got me curious, so 635000000000000 (which is the average middle point for the range of the color of blue) divided by 2 a multitude of times brings me to the oscillating frequency of 577.5291356258094. So give or take its like 578 hertz.

So go here and put in 578 hertz. http://www.szynalski.com/tone-generator/.

At least I think thats right.
sammyp
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October 03, 2017, 06:26:45 PM
 #7

this is really interesting. it sounds blue

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LeonardoDiCrypto
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November 01, 2017, 12:09:45 AM
 #8

The color blue in the visible spectrum is about 450–495 nm in wave length and 606–668 THz in frequency of light. if THz is 10¹² Hz, just tune it down by halfing it to remain in the same octave.

That's a very good beginning. Now we only need a nice way to put the notes down on paper and a synthetizer to start playing colors in a concert Smiley
djangocoin
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December 20, 2017, 05:17:07 PM
 #9

Colors don't make sounds as they are light ;d

:]
UnknownTomato
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December 20, 2017, 09:39:13 PM
 #10

I've heard a lot about this sound, but I've never encountered it Roll Eyes. And honestly speaking, I do not really believe in its existence. I really do not want to hear it somewhere, in crowded places Grin Grin Grin And who of you already heard it? Interestingly, what is the note that makes people "tense"? Wink
spongegar
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December 20, 2017, 11:17:44 PM
 #11

It would be hard to describe the sound of a color if you don't have synesthesia yourself. But one must wonder that if a person could actually hear a color then other stimulus could be expressed in a different sense. For example, what would c#M smell like? What does sweet sound like without being metaphorical. It's amazing how the brain works around its limitations

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bernashka
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January 05, 2018, 01:49:43 PM
 #12

The search for exact connection of color and sound, the exact translation of painting into music, humanity devoted more than 300 years of its history (Newton, Kandinsky, Scriabin, Schoenberg, etc.). At the end of the XIX century, this phenomenon was called "color hearing" - SYNESTESIA.
The word "synaesthesia" comes from the Greek synaisthesis and means "confusion of feelings." This phenomenon of perception, when the signals emanating from different senses, are mixed and synthesized. As a result, a person not only hears sounds, but sees them, not only perceives the object, but also feels his taste.
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