When thinking about the Cinderella dress we always imagine her blue dress, however 3 weeks ago as I was researching the Mandela effects after just finding out about them I saw her dress was always white from a reddit thread, and even wrote it down into my private Mandela effect document after researching on how it had always been white. However, after checking today it is now back to blue. I asked 20 people at work.
2 people said white. 18 said Blue 🤷 ♂️ Seeing her transform into the white dress looks completely off. I'm not surprised, disney has countless mandela effects! Cinderella's dress color? Okay.
This is really weird. Today is the first day I've heard of this change. I really thought, after reading SO much into the Mandela effect and paying attention to every.
little. detail. That I wouldn't have missed that Cinderella's dress is NOT blue, it's white/silver.
Cinderella has always been my favorite Disney princess, especially so when I was little (I was born 1999, for reference). I remember clearly loving her black choker for how simple it was, and I remember having a baby Cinderella doll that also had the choker. It's definitely always been black, but the color of her dress was changed in a remaster.
In the original it appears to be more white, while in the remaster it's more like the blue dress we all know she wears. Mandela Effect 417 - YouTube About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features NFL Sunday Ticket. The Mandela Effect gets its name from Nelson Mandela, who died in 2013.
However, many people seem to recall him dying in prison in the 1980s. Some of them are easily explainable, but some will make you question the very fabric of reality if you think about it too hard. We've discovered there are more than a few Disney Mandela Effects.
Which ones trip you up and make you say, "now wait just. Formerly Cinderella's choker is blue Presently Cinderella's choke is black Formerly Cinderella doesn't have ears the whole time Presently Cinderella has ears the whole time. One thing, which always stands out in the original 1950 animated Cinderella film, is Cinderella's dress transformation.
Adults may have arguably always known the peasant girl's dress looks different. However, children also point out how Cinderella's dress doesn't look blue like on all the merchandise compared to what they see in the movie. Due to this, the original color design of.
I realize that the definition of a Mandela Effect is certainly open to interpretation, but to me, the Mandela Effect is more about having an entire lifetime of memories that suddenly don't match the present. The dress was acting weird ("glitching") from the very beginning, and this has always been my experience with it.