waht
- 1,499
- 4
Rasalhague, welcome to the elite club

Your post is a fascinating insight into a synesthesia perspective.
Rasalhague said:I have fixed colour associations for letters, numbers, days, months, compass directions and the concepts of left and right. I associate triangles, squares etc. with the colour corresponding to the number of their sides. Like Waht, my A is yellow. My B is a very dark maroon. But we differ on C. Mine is light green.
Nice. I counted the occurrence of most common colors of letters that I perceive in the alphabet. And the distribution is: there is seven shades of yellow, five shades of white, and four shades of red, and three of brown all spread throughout the alphabet. The remaining few letters take on more cooler colors: green, blue, purple, and black.
If I think of a letter without looking at one, it tends to have its own synaesthetic colour by default, especially if I only think of a fairly abstract idea of the letter without imagining an example of it written down, in which case I can picture it how I choose, although I’ll probably still have a lingering impression of its synaesthetic colour.
For me, yellow is an aspect or attribute of A, part of its nature, and a blue A is an A in disguise! An A in drag?! When I think of the idea now, I have to make a conscious effort to banish the impression of yellow, otherwise saying “a blue A” creates a similar visual impression to “a blue yellow”--I see both colours.
Yes, same thing happens. I realized though that a thought of a letter triggers the color experience. If I close my eyes, and think about a letter, a color jolt occurs.
When I look a blue A, this is I think a what happens. The visual part of the brain immediately registers a blue color faster than the time it takes for another part of the brain to covert the visual symbol of the letter into an abstract thought which in turn triggers the synesthesia color experience. So in a sense a resonance effect occurs, which is flipping back and forth between the color perceptions that are separated by a small time delay.
As Zooby suggested to check out the effects of grapheme synesthesia on different colors of font, and background. I found that the time delay gets noticeably longer with more flamboyant font color, and darker background.
If I need two Greek letters to represent angles, I prefer not to use the traditional theta and phi, as these are both a smoky blue colour, albeit theta a little lighter than the pigeon-blue phi. Alpha and beta, which--like most of the Greek alphabet--have the same colours as their Roman counterparts make a much better contrast. (I should say my first language is English.)
Yup, most of the Greek alphabet is isomorphic synesthesially speaking to the Roman alphabet, with an exception of few letters. Gamma is still same as 'c' , delta is same is 'd' or phi is same as 'p' - which is why I think that the visual processing of the geometry of symbols like lines, curves gets translated into a thought first, and then a color experience occurs from the thought.
So I look at a triangle letter, and think to myself "aha, that's a delta." And immediately a 'd' follows from the first word "delta" and hence I get a color experience of 'd'.
Weird one is gamma. I should get a color experience for 'g' but instead I get a color for 'c' a third letter of the alphabet as is gamma.
3+4=7
RED+YELLOW=ORANGE
2+4=6
BLUE+YELLOW=GREY-GREEN
2+3=5
BLUE+RED=VERY DARK BLUE/BLACK/PURPLE
That's a correct addition of color. For me it's yellow + red = white.
When it comes to whole words, with me too, as with Waht, the colour of the initial letter usually predominates. My first, quickest, strongest, readiest association for colour words such as RED, GREEN, BLUE depends on the meaning. That’s the association I have when I just glance at the word or think of it as a whole without paying much attention. But as I look now at the letters I’ve just typed, paying more attention to them, I can’t help but “see” the colours of individual letters emerging.
Yes indeed. The first letter sets the color of the rest of a word. But there are few exceptions in days, months, shapes, or directions that don't follow this pattern. There is a unique color for most of those.
Monday is same color as 'm' but Wednesday is different color than a 'w'.