Forum Discussion
MiaSkywalker1
5 years agoSeasoned Ace
@puzzlezaddict:
Your gift has been checked and is CC free. :innocent:
Actually, I had no idea you were my buddy. Goes to show how well my critical thinking is working. :D. I had wondered who your buddy was going to be, but never thought it was me!
I *love* that house! You caught the festive spirit so perfectly! And lots of purple! I love purple and wood tones together like that. What a wonderful adorable house!
I'm still having some problems with the game crashing my system, and I am currently set to the version of my The Sims 3 directory with no mods or CC, so not my PLAYING game right now, but rest assured, this house is going to go in right away! I have my two Sims that are ready to move in to this as a second home, and holiday getaway. :) (I really need to figure out that crashing problem. It's so odd.)
And yeah, I have some vision problems that have to do with color. It's genetic, actually; neither my mother nor my brother can see bright red at all. So it's not the same red/green "color blindness" that everyone assumes that all people with color problems have, because it's not gender linked; pretty much everyone on my mother's side of the family has it, from her father down. Neither my sister nor I have the problem, although my niece and nephew (my brother's kids) both have it. Otoh, I have some problems distinguishing most colors. Strangely, I can see variations and shades of purple very distinctly, yet other colors, not so much. It's probably why I'm so attracted to purple; I see it more distinctly than I do other colors.
My sister, however, sees shades and variations of colors like it's nobody's business. It's one of the reasons she's such an amazing artist; she just KNOWS what color should be where in things, and gets them absolutely perfect. My brother is convinced that her ability to see these shades in such detail is directly related to his and my mother's problem seeing red, and my own problem differentiating most colors. It's like the same genetic variant, but with a shift.
Your gift has been checked and is CC free. :innocent:
Actually, I had no idea you were my buddy. Goes to show how well my critical thinking is working. :D. I had wondered who your buddy was going to be, but never thought it was me!
I *love* that house! You caught the festive spirit so perfectly! And lots of purple! I love purple and wood tones together like that. What a wonderful adorable house!
I'm still having some problems with the game crashing my system, and I am currently set to the version of my The Sims 3 directory with no mods or CC, so not my PLAYING game right now, but rest assured, this house is going to go in right away! I have my two Sims that are ready to move in to this as a second home, and holiday getaway. :) (I really need to figure out that crashing problem. It's so odd.)
And yeah, I have some vision problems that have to do with color. It's genetic, actually; neither my mother nor my brother can see bright red at all. So it's not the same red/green "color blindness" that everyone assumes that all people with color problems have, because it's not gender linked; pretty much everyone on my mother's side of the family has it, from her father down. Neither my sister nor I have the problem, although my niece and nephew (my brother's kids) both have it. Otoh, I have some problems distinguishing most colors. Strangely, I can see variations and shades of purple very distinctly, yet other colors, not so much. It's probably why I'm so attracted to purple; I see it more distinctly than I do other colors.
My sister, however, sees shades and variations of colors like it's nobody's business. It's one of the reasons she's such an amazing artist; she just KNOWS what color should be where in things, and gets them absolutely perfect. My brother is convinced that her ability to see these shades in such detail is directly related to his and my mother's problem seeing red, and my own problem differentiating most colors. It's like the same genetic variant, but with a shift.