Thanks for this. I had actually heard of an application of this from a friend of mine who is the principal tuba player for an orchestra in a southern state. He prints his music up on paper that is in the muted orange to red color spectrum to combat his dyslexia. Once he learns it, he’s able to use traditionally printed music.
Thanks for this. I had actually heard of an application of this from a friend of mine who is the principal tuba player for an orchestra in a southern state. He prints his music up on paper that is in the muted orange to red color spectrum to combat his dyslexia. Once he learns it, he’s able to use traditionally printed music.
I’m going to share this with him. He’s active on several fora and I wonder if a screen cover in that spectrum might help his speed with typing.
Thanks for this. I had actually heard of an application of this from a friend of mine who is the principal tuba player for an orchestra in a southern state. He prints his music up on paper that is in the muted orange to red color spectrum to combat his dyslexia. Once he learns it, he’s able to use traditionally printed music.
I’m going to share this with him. He’s active on several fora and I wonder if a screen cover in that spectrum might help his speed with typing.