- Joined
- Nov 16, 2003
- Messages
- 645
TL,
Yes indeed, that is "Kashmir blue" I can show you a few more examples. Note that the color and saturation do resemble the color of a cornflower in Kismet''s image. Exact match, no, but it conveys the sense of cornflower.
In Plato''s philosophy there were two levels of reality. There was the realm of the pure idea and that of the senses which Plato compared to shadows on the wall of a cave. Without waxing too poetic, Kismet''s image conveys the pure idea of the color. A transparent gemstone is another type of medium altogether, but we are seeking a comparison, when you say that a sapphire has the color of cornflower, you aren''t saying that it really looks like the flower, it is a metaphor. How does one convey metaphor by abbreviation? GIA shorthand attempts it but...!
Yes indeed, that is "Kashmir blue" I can show you a few more examples. Note that the color and saturation do resemble the color of a cornflower in Kismet''s image. Exact match, no, but it conveys the sense of cornflower.
In Plato''s philosophy there were two levels of reality. There was the realm of the pure idea and that of the senses which Plato compared to shadows on the wall of a cave. Without waxing too poetic, Kismet''s image conveys the pure idea of the color. A transparent gemstone is another type of medium altogether, but we are seeking a comparison, when you say that a sapphire has the color of cornflower, you aren''t saying that it really looks like the flower, it is a metaphor. How does one convey metaphor by abbreviation? GIA shorthand attempts it but...!