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Depends whether you mean coloured light or colours paints. To make white light, mix all the colours. But you can't make white by mixing coloured paints - as far as I know.
The board containing their paints - that they use to mix their colours..
If you mix all the colours as lights (red light plus green light plus blue light etc) then you get white light but if you mix all the colours together as opaque pigments or paints then you get black.
Primary colours are red blue and yellow and you mix combinations of them for new colours!!
If you mix paint of those colours, you will get a brown-black mixture. This is because paints work through absorbing certain colours of light, and mixing all three will result in a mixture which absorbs all of the colours and reflects none or very little. If you mix light of those colours, red and green form yellow, so you would get a yellow colour. Yellow because red + green = yellow and yellow + yellow = yellow.
It is impossible to mix colours to make black. The closest you can make is a dark brown by mixing all three primary colours together. Burnt Umber is usually a good replacement for black.
Yes
Patrick uses a mix of vibrant colours but the main materials he uses is Acrylic Paints and fine liners.
because they are virgin paints and dont no how to mix!
Just mix a lot of random colors.
Yes, enamel paints can be mixed.
red, yellow and blue are primary colours, if you mix them together you will get some of the secondary colours, then mix the secondary colours with secondary colours and so on...