Light skin: Revision history


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  • curprev 11:3411:34, 25 May 2024Biosaurt talk contribs 62,750 bytes +72 Again, this article is about Light Skin, not your subjective interpretation of whatever you think that is. This article already cites 9-10 sources that physically verify that East Asians have light skin. There is no need to say "Some parts of", considering that there is no claim anywhere that says "100% of East Asians have light skin". If that was the prerequisite to be included in this article, then we would need to get rid of West, Central, North Asia, and Europe as well. undo
  • curprev 10:5310:53, 25 May 2024Rainbluetiful talk contribs 62,678 bytes −4 Yes it can be found in some parts of East Asia, not all. (By light skin i meant that kind of light skin that doesn't easily tan) because majority of them tan easily but turn pale when sun exposure is avoided (light olive skin fits this description) naturally light skin people without olive tones don't tan easily no matter what. this link confirms that majority (not all) tan easily: https://www.quora.com/If-East-Asians-and-Europeans-are-pale-skinned-because-of-the-cooler-climate-why-aren-t-Nat... undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 10:3210:32, 25 May 2024Rainbluetiful talk contribs 62,682 bytes +2 No edit summary undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 10:3110:31, 25 May 2024Rainbluetiful talk contribs 62,680 bytes +14 I added north asians because some or plenty of them have natural light skin (which looks rosy due to less active melanocytes) Provide links to my previous edit for proof: 1) https://www.goldenstatedermatology.com/blog/asian-skin-care/#:~:text=Asians%20in%20general%20have%20more,the%20sun%20and%20tanning%20booths. 2) https://www.quora.com/Despite-having-almost-the-same-skin-tone-why-is-it-harder-for-Europeans-to-tan-than-East-Asians Also the pic of koreans look more pale cream skin, not rosy. undo Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 10:2310:23, 25 May 2024Rainbluetiful talk contribsm 62,666 bytes −68 Changed it to "some East Asians". "light skin" on this article refers to translucent, slight pinkish-bluish cast that is prone to sunburn and doesnt easily tan. Generally East Asians lack the SLC24A5/Ala111thr gene. It's found in minority of East asians though. Most East Asians I know have pale olive/cream skin that easily tans and has been confirmed by many of them based on my research. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8e/Ala111Thr_allele_frequency_distribution0.png. undo Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 07:3207:32, 25 May 2024Biosaurt talk contribs 62,734 bytes +297 Another citation of a scientific article using objective measurements that found Japanese and Chinese women having skin in the Fitzpatrick 1-4 range. There should no longer be any excuse that random freshly created sockpuppet accounts can use to remove "East Asia" from the article. Much of the article is already specifically talking about East Asians, removing that category from the leade is nothing less than vandalism. undo
  • curprev 07:2207:22, 25 May 2024Biosaurt talk contribs 62,437 bytes +373 Added another cited scientific journal showing a typical L* value of 66-68 for Korean and Chinese subjects. This value is similar to the values found by Jablonski for many European populations. Measured data is far more valuable than subjective Fitzpatrick ratings, but even if you insist on that objectively inferior system, the article also found that the majority of East Asians are 2 or 3 on that scale, with some also being type 1 and 4. undo
  • curprev 07:1107:11, 25 May 2024Biosaurt talk contribs 62,064 bytes +434 The Fitzpatrick scale is considered obsolete and deprecated because it does not use any objective measurements. Rather, it just uses a subjective evaluation from a human judge. The cited study used a color spectrophotometer to find that the average skin color of Chinese women was classified as "Light" according to the more modern ITA color system, with the number approaching "Very Light" in some areas. undo
  • curprev 06:0506:05, 25 May 2024Biosaurt talk contribs 61,630 bytes +68 Undid revision 1225545046 by Rainbluetiful (talk) Undid revision because there are multiple studies that show the skin reflectance of Koreans is as light or lighter than many European populations. undo Tag: Undo
  • curprev 03:5203:52, 25 May 2024Rainbluetiful talk contribs 61,562 bytes −68 Removed Koreans because majority of them belong to the "light cream olive" or "pale cream olive" skin tone. Even if they are pale they still tan easily which isn't a trait found in naturally pale people. 1) Majority of Koreans fall under cream skin tone or pale cream skin tone: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_skin 2) According to this research majority of korean fall under Fitzpatrick III to IV: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5597652/ 3) According to this map, Koreans c... undo Tags: Reverted Mobile edit Mobile web edit

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