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yellow and violet, blue and orange, green and red
Yellow according to the colorwheel
The complimentary color of magenta is green. The complimentary color of yellow is blue. :-)
no, blue and orange are complementary colors and red and green are complementary colors
Yes, those seven colors are all in the rainbow. So are all of the other colors that you or anyone else has ever seen.
all complementary colors are directly across from each other. Example: Purple---- Yellow or Blue--- Orange
yellow and violet, blue and orange, green and red
yellow
yellow
Black is the color that really absorbs the sun. Since its dark only light colors will reflect the sun.
Take one set of complementary colors; say blue and orange. For a single split-complementary you would use orange and the two colors adjacent to blue, but not blue (green-blue and violet-blue). To make a double split-complementary use the four colors adjacent to the original complementary pair. The colors you would use are green-blue, violet-blue, yellow-orange, and red-orange. THIS IS NOT THE SAME AS A TETRADIC COLOR SCHEME WHICH USES TWO SETS OF COMPLEMENTARY COLORS.
The original complementary color model only saw colors in primary and secondary pairs such as red-green, yellow-violet, and blue-orange. In the newer RGB model, complementary colors that are mixed at the right amounts will produce either black or white.
Yes. Use a complementary color, such as yellow, to bring out the violet.
The intermediate colors include red-orange, yellow-orange, blue violet, yellow-green, blue-green, and red-violet. To get an intermediate color, a primary color is combined with a secondary color that is adjacent.
Violet
magenta, yellow, and cyan
Complimentary colors are colors that are directly opposite to each other. such as red and green, yellow and violet, orange and blue. These are colors that give the most intense contrast. So any colors that are contrasting make up a complimentary color scheme. You can mix these colors to get beautiful "go together" colors. Take red and green, for example. You can lighten red to make a shade of pink and then contrast it with a shade of green that can be dark, light or anywhere in between.