|
Snow White
White is the color of things that reflect light of all parts of the visible spectrum equally and are not dull (see grey). more...
Home
Building Toys
Classic Toys
Educational
Electronic, Battery, Wind-Up
Model RR, Trains
Models, Kits
Outdoor Toys, Structures
Pretend Play, Preschool
Puzzles
Radio Control
Robots, Monsters, Space Toys
Stuffed Animals
TV, Movie, Character Toys
Alf
Arthur
Barney
Batman
Bear in the Big Blue House
BeyBlade
Big Comfy Couch
Blues Clues
Bob the Builder
Caillou
California Raisins
Clifford the Big Red Dog
Curious George
Digimon
Disney
101 Dalmatians
Beauty & the Beast
Bug's Life
Cars
Chick Hicks
Doc Hudson
Flo
Guido
Lightning McQueen
Luigi
Mack
Mater
Other
Ramone
Red
Sally
Sarge
Sets
Sheriff
The King
Tractor
Chicken Little
Cinderella
Disney Princesses
Donald Duck
Finding Nemo
Goofy
Incredibles
Kim Possible
Lilo & Stitch
Lion King
Little Mermaid
Lizzie McGuire
Mickey
Clothing & Accessories
Figures
Home Décor
Other
Toys & Games
Minnie
Monsters Inc.
Nightmare Before Christmas
Clothing & Accessories
Figures
Home Décor
Other
Plush Dolls
Other
Pirates of the Caribbean
Pluto
Shark Tale
Snow White
Tinker Bell, Peter Pan
Toy Story
Clothing & Accessories
Dolls
Figures
Home Décor
Other
Dora the Explorer
Dr. Seuss
Dragon Tales
DragonBall Z
Dukes of Hazzard
ET Extra Terrestrial
Fairly Odd Parents
Family Guy
Flintstones
Futurama
Garfield
Gumby
Hamtaro
Harry Potter
Hello Kitty
Howdy Doody
Invader Zim
Jay Jay the Jet Plane
Jimmy Neutron
Lamb Chop, Shari Lewis
Land Before Time
Lost in Space
Maisy
Munsters
Muppets, Sesame Street
My Little Pony
My Melody, Miffy
Noddy
Other
Peanuts Gang
Pee-Wee Herman
Pokemon
Popeye
Popples
Powerpuff Girls
Rocky & Bullwinkle
Rudolph
Rugrats
Scooby-Doo
Simpsons
Smurfs
South Park
Speed Racer
Spider-Man
Spirit
SpongeBob Squarepants
Strawberry Shortcake
Teletubbies
Theodore Tugboat
Thomas the Tank Engine
Three Stooges
Veggie Tales
Warner Bros.
Wiggles
Winnie the Pooh
Toy Soldiers
Vintage, Antique Toys
The color (more accurately, it contains all the colors of the visible spectrum and is sometimes described as an achromatic color, like black) that has high brightness but zero hue. The impression of white light can be created by mixing (via a process called "additive mixing") appropriate intensities of the primary color spectrum: red, green and blue, but it must be noted that the illumination provided by this technique has significant differences from that produced by incandescence (see below).
In nature, the color white results when transparent fibers, particles, or droplets are in a transparent matrix of a substantially different refractive index. Examples include classic "white" substances such as sugar, foam, pure sand or snow, cotton, clouds, milk, etc. Crystal boundaries and imperfections can also make otherwise transparent materials white, as in the case of milky quartz or the microcrystalline structure of a seashell. This is also true for artificial paints and pigments, where the color white results when finely divided transparent material of a high refractive index is suspended in a contrasting binder. Typically paints contain calcium carbonate and/or synthetic rutile with no other pigments if a white color is desired.
Shade
Paint
In painting, white can be created by reflecting ambient light from a white pigment, although the ambient light must be white light, or else the white pigment will appear the color of the light. White when mixed with black produces gray. To art students, the use of white can present particular problems, and there is at least one training course specializing in the use of white in art. There are also speculations about the use of white and other colors.
White light
Until Newton's work became accepted, most scientists believed that white was the fundamental color of light; and that other colors were formed only by adding something to light. Newton demonstrated this was not true by passing white light through a prism, then directing the individual colored beams through another prism. If the colors were added by the prism, the second prism should have added further colors to the single-colored beam. Since the single-colored beam remained a single color, Newton concluded that the prism merely separated the colors already present in the light. White light is the effect of combining the visible colors of light in equal proportions.
In the science of lighting, there is a continuum of colors of light that can be called "white". One set of colors that deserve this description are the colors emitted, via the process called incandescence, by a black body at various relatively-high temperatures. For example, the color of a black body at a temperature of 2848 kelvins matches that produced by domestic incandescent light bulbs. It is said that "the color temperature of such a light bulb is 2848 K". The white light used in theatre illumination has a color temperature of about 3200 K. Daylight has a nominal color temperature of 5400 K (called equal energy white), but can vary from a cool red up to a bluish 25,000 K. Not all black body radiation can be considered white light: the background radiation of the universe, to name an extreme example, is only a few kelvins and is quite invisible.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|
|