Red & Blue
Remember the blending of colors as a child if you did finger paints? Well it makes a vivid purple.
Remember the blending of colors as a child if you did finger paints? Well it makes a vivid purple.
Mix blue and red together.
red and blue
Green, Purple and organge when dealing with paints and the like.
The chemical name for the color purple is Manganese violet, which is a synthetic pigment used in various applications such as inks, paints, and plastics to achieve a purple hue.
No, Purple without Blue is Red. And conversely, Purple without Red, is Blue.
That's what they taught you in elementary school, but it simply doesn't work. You will get at best a dull or dark purple. Magenta and cyan make purple when mixed in the right proportions. More magenta than cyan is needed. Paints labeled with these names are hard to come by, and especially with magenta there are a lot of variations. Cyan is known in paint as phthalo blue.
No. It simply makes a bluish purple, with the exact color depending how much of each color was used. If you are trying to make black with paints, there are a few things you could possibly do. However, they include using all three primary colors or other colors derived form the primary colors.
Mix red and blue, preferably in equal parts, to get violet; if this is the purple you are looking for, leave it, but if it is not, simply add a very small amount of white (tinting) to the violet to get "purple". You can also add black to shade the violet or purple if it is too light.
No, blue and purple do not make red. Blue and red make purple, while red and white make pink.
Oil painting and collage.