I'd like to see these!
Aug. 31st, 2006 02:30 pmThe other day I was out shopping. Right now it's Back To School Sale time, so things like crayons and colored pencils and markers are all on sale. I picked up three packages of fine line Crayola markers for Pennsic Heralds Point, which cost a total of two bucks. But while I was there, I looked at the colors offered in the "Bright Colors" collection. Among the offerings are "Infra Red" and "Ultra Violet".
All marketing hype, of course. But the geek in me wants to see Crayola sell markers that are *truly* colored infrared and ultraviolet. *Those* would be cool to have.
All marketing hype, of course. But the geek in me wants to see Crayola sell markers that are *truly* colored infrared and ultraviolet. *Those* would be cool to have.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-31 07:56 pm (UTC)Phosphate is used for softening water, binding with the metallic ions like Fe and Ca in wash water so the surfactants in the detergent don't bind with them before binding with the soil particles on the dirty laundry.
When you mix phosphates which increase the cleaning ability of the detergent with optical brighteners which absorb UV light and re-emit it as visible light in the blue region of the spectrum, whites get whiter, brights get brighter. At least in America. I've heard that in China a yellowish white is considered whiter than a bluish white.
It's so nice when I get to put what I learned in college to use :)
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Date: 2006-08-31 08:01 pm (UTC)"To leave school, is to leave life"
-- an alien in Alan Dean Foster's "Quozl"
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Date: 2006-09-01 01:39 pm (UTC)Now all I must do is convince Crayola to make a marker with no color except that... and likewise a marker whose dyes only absorb IR.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-01 02:34 pm (UTC)