By definition, the fact that you can differentiate between white letters and the glass background means that there is contrast.jimlongley wrote:Black being the absence of color only applies to light, in pigments, which printing is, black is the presence of all colors.WildBill wrote:
In this instance, I believe that "transparent" is a color. The reason I say this is because black lettering on a piece of white paper would be a valid sign. A person could argue that black is the absence of color, so the sign is not valid. I don't think he would win.
I completely understand what you are saying about a judge "looking for a way to convict." A perfect example is the recent post about the fellow who got convicted of having a "switchblade." Sometimes the facts get in the way of the argument.
Transparent can not be considered a color in any artistic or lighting sense, as it passes on the color behind it, and if it were truly the absence of color, it would be black, which is beginning to get circular.
As Chas notes, bad case law might result, but in the absence of a test case we all have to decide for ourselves, and I think a good case could be made that white letters on glass do not constitute contrast. I have a couple of color blind friends who would agree.
I am starting to beat a dead horse. [If I see it] I will obey a 30.06 sign with letters on a glass door. I don't want or need my name in a law case book as a citation.