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I'd be nice to have a color legend next to the y-axis of hue
60 0 Replyyeah that part of the graph is completely useless to people who haven't memorised the exact degrees of the scale, which is most people, even most artists
8 0 ReplyThat'd be nice.
90 and 120 are rolling through the greens. Are posters mostly green? That seems odd to me.
9 0 ReplyThe problem is that averaging hue makes no sense at all because hue is not a longest scale.
If you take a red poster (0) and a blue poster (240), it averages to green. Or take red (0) and red (359), averaging to cyan (180).
15 0 ReplyThe average of 0° and 359° is obviously 359.5°.
it's a radial scale.
6 0 ReplyBy that logic, the average of red and cyan is both purple and lime. Still useless.
8 0 ReplyNot if there is a clear trend. If most movie posters are blue, three average will be blue.
But i agree, it is useless if there is no clear trend.
1 0 Reply
I wouldn't trust someone who tried to visualize hue like this to make that calculation correctly.
4 0 ReplyYou know what, I completely agree.
5 0 Reply
It would have made more sense if they had shown the distribution of hue as a polar graph and just had one every decade to show how it changes over time.
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Or even better, change the color of the points and lines to match the associated hue.
34 0 Reply