That makes sense cause in real life this pullet is light gray but she is well camouflaged against the ground even in the green foliage.anything close to pure white gets color shifted pretty noticeably
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That makes sense cause in real life this pullet is light gray but she is well camouflaged against the ground even in the green foliage.anything close to pure white gets color shifted pretty noticeably
Yeah, I wish I could find a way to tweak it, but I think it's just an inherent flaw with these simulations. Silver duckwing is one of my favorite colors on hens, and depending on the environment I think they fit in quite wellThat makes sense cause in real life this pullet is light gray but she is well camouflaged against the ground even in the green foliage.
Huh, buffs are camouflaged a lot better than I had thought!Sorry, I didn't see this! I've found a way to preserve the resolution a little bit better, but it still isn't as good as the originalView attachment 4223192View attachment 4223193View attachment 4223194
In this last image, the same issue that happened with @Perris 's pictures has presented itself; anything close to pure white gets color shifted pretty noticeably, often becoming more blue. I don't think this is actually how it appears to predators, I think it's a software issue
That's the main difference. Where we can see three primary colors (red, green, and blue) most mammals can only see two; red and green are indistinguishable to them. Whether they see it as that weird yellow is just our best guess, since we can't literally see things from their perspective, but we know that their only primary colors are that and blue.Huh, buffs are camouflaged a lot better than I had thought!
Does this seem correct, that predators don't see gree, but a straw color instead?
Huh, buffs are camouflaged a lot better than I had thought!
Yes, this. I wouldn’t say any of my hens are buff exactly though I do have a light game hen. She has a lot of pattern. Her camouflage is better than I expected for sure. Here is a better picture of her. Maybe it’s buff but the pattern helps and moreso the general warinessAlso to add: in terms of color, buff orps blend in quite well, but half the battle in patterning, which they lack
Looks like the dark brown gene? Or maybe quail. Either way she's very prettyYes, this. I wouldn’t say any of my hens are buff exactly though I do have a light game hen. She has a lot of pattern. Her camouflage is better than I expected for sure. Here is a better picture of her. Maybe it’s buff but the pattern helps and moreso the general wariness
View attachment 4223331
I have no idea. These are my first game hens. I know she is a Leiper-Hatch but that’s about it. The brown one is the same breed.Looks like the dark brown gene? Or maybe quail. Either way she's very pretty