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Monochromatic Icon System For The Colorblind

Monochromatic Icon System For The Colorblind

By Kyle Studstill on January 5, 2010

With the Color Add Color Identification System, designer Miguel Neiva has developed a system of monochromatic icons that symbolize a range of colors for the colorblind. The system establishes a code from simple icons that represent red, blue, yellow, white and black;  secondary hues and other colors are denoted by the appropriate combination of these base elements.  Various applications of the system include identification for colored writing instruments, clothing, and transport systems.

Monochromatic Icon System For The Colorblind

Monochromatic Icon System For The Colorblind

Monochromatic Icon System For The Colorblind

[via Core77]

Kyle Studstill

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Kyle Studstill is a regular contributor to PSFK.com. Kyle works as a consultant working at the New York office of PSFK. His background is in analysis, from the analysis of cultural and technological change, to analysis of consumer and human insight, to military intelligence analysis with the US Intelligence and Security Command. Kyle loves the future, much like O'Brien from Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.

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TOPICS: Arts & Culture, Design & Architecture
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