wedding dress color rhyme image
darth1977m
How come some test dummies are dressed up and others are left naked shown wires and gadgets exposed? Lie you'll see, the a driver male dummy dressed in a groom suit like, and the passenger female would be naked with the gadgets and sensors and wires exposed( she would not have a wedding bride dress on or a veil).
How come some crash test dummies are darker( dark grey or black), while other crash test dummies are lighter(light tan or white)? Like you'll see a pure tan colored dummy in one crash test and in another crash test, you'll see a pure dark grey dummy in a crash test?
Answer
because they are a bunch of perverts, sex's, and racist basters there. What the hell do you think idiot? they grab the closes one and go with it. there's no rhyme or reason, or some hidden thing about it.
because they are a bunch of perverts, sex's, and racist basters there. What the hell do you think idiot? they grab the closes one and go with it. there's no rhyme or reason, or some hidden thing about it.
Why did blue become a boy's color and pink a girl's color?
Love
Answer
The idea of pink being for boys and blue being for girls came from Christianity. Red was used for the robes of clergy, so pink (being considered a 'smaller' red) was used for boys. Meanwhile the Virgin Mary was always depicted wearing blue and so blue became considered a 'chaste' colour.
However, between 1918 and 1945 colour dye was too expensive to produce, so all children wore white (and all wedding dresses became white during this time as well). When coloured dye was reintroduced blue was considered a boy colour because it was used in army uniforms (which were very common during 1918-1945), while pink became considered a girl colour because of a 1940s marketing campaign designed to appeal to women with the quick rhyming slogan 'think pink' (huh, sounds familiar).
The idea of pink being for boys and blue being for girls came from Christianity. Red was used for the robes of clergy, so pink (being considered a 'smaller' red) was used for boys. Meanwhile the Virgin Mary was always depicted wearing blue and so blue became considered a 'chaste' colour.
However, between 1918 and 1945 colour dye was too expensive to produce, so all children wore white (and all wedding dresses became white during this time as well). When coloured dye was reintroduced blue was considered a boy colour because it was used in army uniforms (which were very common during 1918-1945), while pink became considered a girl colour because of a 1940s marketing campaign designed to appeal to women with the quick rhyming slogan 'think pink' (huh, sounds familiar).
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