BROWN
2006-08-26 18:14:19
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answer #1
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answered by Celtic Tejas 6
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What do you consider the primary colors in paint? People have been taught the wrong colors as the primary colors for a long time. Most art students are taught that red, yellow and blue are the primary colors. This is WRONG. The fact that mixing these colors gets you a brownish color tells you this. The real subtractive primary colors are magenta, amber and cyan. Look at the colors in the color print cartridge of your printer. It makes photo realistic images, but using the paint "primary" colors you cannot. You should get a neutral Grey when you mix true primary colors. (You don't get black because the pigments cannot be perfect in absorbing light.) I think the red, blue and yellow myth comes from Renaissance painters that didn't have the technology to produce the proper pigments. Science figured out the correct colors and applied it to modern printer technology. But many in the art world ignore scientific progress and have perpetuated their myth.
2006-08-26 21:11:58
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answer #2
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answered by anim8er2 3
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Depends upon the proportion of the primary colors u are adding & the paint in which u are adding. Generally to get pure white u must have proportion of 11& red,59% green & 30% blue color. which will give u white. When u add this color to paint it will be a light color otherwise dark shades of the paint.
2006-08-26 18:23:19
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answer #3
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answered by nilay_space 2
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Primary colours have different meanings to different people, I was taught that the primary colours are red green and blue, these are the additive colours that make your computer monitor work, if the red green and blue pixels are on they will produce white light, your printer is a good example of a system that uses secondary colours, in most cases these are transparent yellow. magenta, cyan with black, if you mix these colours together you will get a brown black, artists use a completely different set of colours they use pigments, these are not transparent but when mixed produce a muddy brown. adobe photoshop is the best software for learning colour theory
2006-08-27 05:18:36
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answer #4
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answered by treb67 2
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with paint a very dark brownish black. If you mix the primary colors with light you get white.
2006-08-26 18:21:32
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answer #5
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answered by MT 1
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Brown.
2006-08-26 18:13:37
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Black. Mixing paint is a subtraction process. If you subtract each primary colour from white, you get black.
2006-08-26 18:17:33
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answer #7
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answered by zee_prime 6
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Brown ... Depending upon how much of each color you put in determines which shade of brown you will get.
2006-08-26 18:17:04
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answer #8
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answered by jane9715 2
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A hideous shade of brown. After a lot of experiments, i found that out!
2006-08-26 18:19:05
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answer #9
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answered by avc1903 1
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A really ugly brown.
2006-08-26 18:16:12
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answer #10
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answered by curiositycat 6
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White.
2006-08-26 18:14:52
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answer #11
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answered by Shane 4
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