Tuesday, February 7, 2012

If two people of same color stand in violet or black light why would one appear darker than the other.?

Why would one person look darker than the other in violet or black light if both look the same color in sunlight or in regular white incandescent light?

If two people of same color stand in violet or black light why would one appear darker than the other.?
soap. different soaps show up different, as do oils, body oils, lotion, dead skin... etc.
Reply:The oils in their skin?
Reply:same color but everyone has different chemistry, oils in skin. Can also be from soap or body/skin lotion.
Reply:Because they are not the "same". All white people do not register the same under that test, either. The pigments within the skin are the results of ancestry, and NOT the casual observation of skin color.



The "darkness" is a result of the amount of melanin in their skin, and that is all.



Many "whites" become greatly upset when a similar "scan" of their skin shows components of other races. ALL (and I mean ALL) humans have common ancestry. The evidence is that ALL humans have African ancestry. ALL! Without exception!



Ron.
Reply:it depends on what's making them look the same skin colour. a 'tan' will show up different from 'ethnicity' under UV light, even if they look the same under white light.



so either one's tanned and the other is darker skin by genetics, or they're both the same skin hue and one has an underlying tan masked by his/her blackness.
Reply:one is shorter, recieves less light. lol

Hotel Blu

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