Dollcee does not remember where or how she decided color is secondary to tone, but once she adopted the concept, her perception of art changed.
She continued to change the color of her hair regularly, but for her there was no contradiction here. She still firmly believed that colors represented emotions and help to signal her direction through the maze of her life.
Dollcee changed the setting on her camera so she could improve her perception of the world tonally. She continued to be amazed at how focusing on tone helped her to see depth in an image.
She said to Dos, I now think I am seeing the world more often in black and white.
Dos replied, he did not believe she was a two-dimensional voyeur.
Dollcee assumed Dos had misunderstood what she said, but was not in the mood, to explain.
Dos then said, with music, reverb and stereo-placement help to define depth for the listener, without tonal balance, it sounds flat.
Dollcee, thought, you bum Dos.