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Real-Life Decision Making

You are at the office working late. You are lucky to have flexible hours and to be able to work in the evening. On your desk, your boss has left a note and instructions on a job he wants done for the following day.

It's a short computer-animated sequence for a commercial, and he wants the sequence colored. He gives you specific color codes that he wants used. You find this odd, because you are normally given the freedom to choose the colors you find most appropriate. The note also tells you that the colors were specifically requested by the client.

"Usually, it's your judgment to figure out what colors will work and will make the overall product feel the best," says Caroline Paul, an animator.

You bring the sequence up on your screen and start working with the color. The rather washed-out pastels don't appeal to you. You switch some of the colors and find that a more bright and bold pattern makes the sequence come alive.

It's late in the evening and you can't get a hold of your boss or the client to discuss the color change. You don't have time to do two separate colorings. What do you do?

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