A very dark, bluish purple I suppose, if you try to add white you will produce a messy looking lavender with traces of red still need mixing if you are painting with thick globules of paint.
If we add equal amount of red with blue we get violet.It is not pure violet.
Orange i like the color orange and this question got me a a+
Orange.
Dark gray 66+66+66% White 100+100+100%
red, green and blue on equal amount.
it matters on how much of the 3 colors you had. if you add more blue and yellow you'll get a red tinged green color. if you add more red and blue you'll get a yellow tinged purple color and if you add more red and yellow you'll get a blue tinged orange color. if you add a pretty equal amount of each color you'll get a mix of either gray, brown, and/or black.
blue, white and red in three vertical bars of equal width.
Yellow, I believe. Not yellow. If you are using equal amounts it would make grey. Blue and yellow mixed make green then add equal amount of red becomes grey.
Purple is a secondary color resulting of the mixture of red and blue on equal amount. There are some variations of tones on the purple color. If you add white to purple you'll get the violet color, which has tonal variations as well.
The lighting color wheel is different from a painting color wheel. If the painting primary colors of red-yellow-blue are added in equal amount, the result is black. If using lighting primary colors of red green and blue lights, the result is primary white.
Two primary colors mix to make a secondary color. Red and blue make purple, yellow blue make green, and yellow and red make orange. Purple, green, and orange are the secondary colors.
Red is a primary color. Violet is a secondary color resultant from mixing equal parts Red and Blue. If you combine the two you will get the tertiary color Red-purple (or Red-violet).