Culture & Psychology of Color

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Culture and psychology impact how people interpret colors. Pink, for example, is considered a masculine color in some places and the opposite in other places. Studies have shown that certain colors - even shades within the same color - can elicit certain moods and behaviors in people.
See more examples of the fascinating ways humans use color to express themselves and communicate meaning in this latest episode of Future Future hosted by Mardis Bagley and Phnam Bagley.

Chapters
0:00 Culture impacts color perception
1:20 Culture and color patterns
2:50 Color as a wayfinding device

#futurefuture #nonfiction #culture #psychology #color
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Does a certain color make you feel a certain way? Tell us here in the comments.

NonfictionDesign
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I'm not saying that it was not interesting. But this video is so short and does explain anything that we don't already know.

Different cultures view colours differently? To some people who have never left their country or never consumed media from a different culture this might be mind-blowing but to basically everyone outside USA, this is Tuesday.

What we wanted to see is how different cultures view the same colour differently. Did you know Yellow is associated with cheapness, cowardice and deceit but only in USA while the rest of the world thinks of the sun or gold.

You mentioned pink and masculinity. Go deeper please.

More research and be more inclusive please. Because this is the internet and everything you post reaches a global audience but does not necessarily catch the interest of everyone. And I guess, everyone just likes it when they hear their own country/area/culture mentioned.

terry_the_terrible