a blackish-brown, i tried something like what you said and that's what i got
2007-01-05 13:57:13
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answer #1
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answered by bostet7 3
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Depends on the color paint in the store...you're not going to get black if all they sell is white and lilac paint!! Also, if some paint of the paint is oil based and some is not, they're not gonna mix at all.
2007-01-05 15:33:04
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answer #2
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answered by jackiemm 2
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I've done it before whaen we need to paint something that the color didn't matter. It came out as a neutral greenish-gray color. I've also used old paint to "stretch" a small quantity of paint to cover say an accent wall. It's good cause then you use up old paint. Two things to watch out for 1that it's all water based 2 that the paint isn;t ruined beyond usable.
2007-01-05 15:08:37
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answer #3
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answered by KM 3
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In theory, the result of mixing every color together is black, but in actual practice, it's more like a brown or grey color. It wouldn't be a pleasant color, that's for sure.
2007-01-05 15:11:31
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answer #4
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answered by Morgan S 3
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You get a grey that is so dark it appears black. A shade as I have understood the definition is any colour mixed with black or the colour´s complimentary colour.Black is when the mixture of pigments absorbs all light shining on it.
2007-01-06 06:53:00
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answer #5
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answered by Peter J 3
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A Muddy Mess
2007-01-06 10:51:03
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answer #6
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answered by cheers 5
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I don't have an Art History degree....like that matters...but I've painted for 50 years....and I did work for a household recycling center where they mixed together leftover latex paint...you get gray....not brown.
2007-01-06 17:41:40
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answer #7
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answered by Victor 4
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Brown. and black IS a color (Crayola says so). Black and white are only NOT colors when you talk about light...when you talk about solid objects (like crayons) black and white are colors.
2007-01-05 15:24:00
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answer #8
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answered by smellyfoot ™ 7
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Some red on cheeks,some violet shade injury colours on different parts of body,by the owner of store.
2007-01-05 15:07:09
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answer #9
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answered by sachkehtahu 4
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Depends how many of certain colours are on a shelf... and, even if you mix it for ages, you usually still get veins of colour running through it... a channel of yellow here, a stripe of blue there...
2007-01-05 16:11:27
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answer #10
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answered by Glaedr 2
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depends on what colors the paint store has in stock...
2007-01-05 15:17:26
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answer #11
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answered by Photog906 2
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