measure out water and the same amount of baby oil. add food coloring to water and powder tempera paint to the oil,, pour into a larger bottle,,
the only trouble I'm having is getting the mixing of each color to make a true secondary color,,, how dark or light should each one be?
The tubes used for fasting glucose is the SST tubes. The tubes are clear in color. The stoppers for the tubes are gold and red gray in color. The tubes contain a gel inside for separating the blood.
The recommended color tubes for blood collection for lipase and amylase are usually light green or green tubes containing sodium heparin as an anticoagulant. These tubes help preserve enzyme activity in the collected blood sample.
The color tube used for collecting plasma is typically green or lavender. The green tubes are often treated with heparin as an anticoagulant for plasma collection, while lavender tubes contain an EDTA additive.
Purple-top tubes, also known as EDTA tubes, are commonly used for hematology tests because the anticoagulant EDTA helps preserve blood cell morphology and inhibits clotting.
The CPK color convention for test tubes typically assigns carbon with the color black, oxygen with red, and nitrogen with blue.
The Red/Gray color tubes have serum in the serum separating tubes.
The Red/Gray color tubes usually have serum in them.
Different laboratories may use different color codes for test tubes depending on their specific protocols. However, a common color coding for test tubes used in centrifuges is as follows: red for serum tubes, lavender for EDTA tubes, green for heparin tubes, and blue for citrate tubes.
discovery
The tubes used for fasting glucose is the SST tubes. The tubes are clear in color. The stoppers for the tubes are gold and red gray in color. The tubes contain a gel inside for separating the blood.
what results are used for green tubes
Europium
pink
you can have any color but red... and the tubes can't be visible you can have any color but red... and the tubes can't be visible
In cytogenetic studies, specimens are typically collected in heparinized green top tubes or sodium heparin yellow top tubes to prevent clotting. The color of the tubes indicates the type of anticoagulant used to preserve the specimen for cytogenetic analysis.
The recommended color tubes for blood collection for lipase and amylase are usually light green or green tubes containing sodium heparin as an anticoagulant. These tubes help preserve enzyme activity in the collected blood sample.
The lavender and green tubes