2011 Wrap-Up for Mushroom Observer
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Colors from Black on White

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Observation: Clitocybe subconnexa Murrill (31081)
About Clitocybe subconnexa Murrill
Public Description (default) [Edit]
When: 2009-12-29
Collection location: White Hill Open Space, Marin Co., California, USA [Click for map]
Who: Ron Pastorino (Ronpast)
No herbarium specimen

Notes: The spores were pale orange, ornamented, and approx. 5.0-5.5 X 3.1-3.9 microns.
Did not detect any strong odor.

[admin – Sat Aug 14 02:07:50 +0000 2010]: Changed location name from ‘White Hill Open Space, Marin County, California’ to ‘White Hill Open Space, Marin Co., California, USA

Proposed Names: Propose Another Name
Proposed Name User Community Vote
  Ronpast   64% (4)   Eye3Eyes3
Used references: The Genus Clitocybe of California by Denise Gregory

Please login to propose your own names and vote on existing names.

Eye3 = Observer’s choice Eyes3 = Current consensus
Comments: Add Comment

Created: 2009-12-31 03:31:14 WET (+0000)
By: Paul Derbyshire (Twizzler)
Summary: Color charts

present a few difficulties.

Buying printed ones a) costs money, b) adds the complication of shipping, c) probably requires a credit card, and d) results in depending on a particular vendor staying in business and not changing anything.

Using an image from the web and printing it seems stabler (you can swap copies with bittorrent if it comes to that) but runs into the problem that different printers may print it differently.

Best might be a different approach: take spore print photos on a white/black divided background with your camera set to auto-white-balance so the white half is used by the camera to adjust the image tint and correct for lighting and any camera-specific idiosyncrasies. With any luck, the same spore print will come out the same RGB colors in the resulting digital photos if taken with this technique. Then the only color cards you need to get consistent are the black and white spore print cards, and any printer can print solid black and solid white consistently. Perhaps this should be tested: photo the same spore print, with auto-WB, with several common camera makes and models and see if the results are reasonably consistent if the print was on a divided black and white card. If the results are consistent, then we can just take such photos and compare the colors. Even though our monitors might not display colors identically, if jpegs with the same color are compared on the same monitor they should still look the same.

54965

Created: 2009-12-31 02:11:34 WET (+0000)
By: Darvin DeShazer (darv)
Summary: Online Auction Color Chart

The Online Auction Color Chart has over 900 color samples and is still available on their web site.
http://www.onlineauctioncolorchart.com/

19351

Created: 2009-12-31 01:33:05 WET (+0000)
By: Dave in NE PA
Summary: Arora calls the spore print color

“pinkish buff or flesh colored” for subconnexa. Maybe pale orange falls within this color range? This reminds me of something. A couple years back I purchased the “Online Auction Color Chart” for about $6 online. I haven’t got into the habit of using it. But I think next year I’ll try to remember to make this a point of emphasis. It would really take a lot of the subjectivity out of spore print color reporting… just find a match and report the code #.



Created: 2009-12-31 00:25:30 WET (+0000)
Last modified: 2011-03-17 16:27:26 WET (+0000)
Viewed: 97 times, last viewed: 2011-12-20 19:52:20 WET (+0000)
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