It soaks into the black fabric, stone, liquid, mud, paint, wood ... whatever absorbs the light and looks black ...
then it turns to heat, and warms the material that absorbed the light.
1. When light falls on a Black body it aborbs all light and converts into heat. This raises the temp. of the Object. Now this object reradiates this heat in the form Electromagnetic waves in the Microwave region.
Honey,light blue,green,brown,blue,and light green
Black colors. also browns can go with it, depending on the shade of blue
if your looking for clothes go with either light pink, white or black or if its a colour for mixing just try black or white!
The color black is made by absorbing all of the colors of light. Absorbed light turns into heat. Thus, a black shirt will absorb heat and will raise your body temperature if you wear it.
absorbed
it depends if it's a nice black shirt I would go with kahkis but if its a casual shirt I would do light blue jeans
Any dark colour. You want a colour that is bright or a colour that shows up well against black.
Yes light gray does go with black
Green
it wud depend on high light u want the colour to go or wat colour u were lokkin for but u wnt get the colour u are lookin for straight away you will need to use a toner to get colour u want
well, let me try to explain the answer i am sure that you will reach to the answer... RGB and CMYK are different colour system. RGB Stands accordingly as Red, Green and Blue and CMYK stands accordingly as Cyan, Meganta, Yellow and Black. * RBG colour system is based on "The colour of light Rays" and * CMYK colour system is based on "The Reflection of light Rays" The Reflection of light is always dull than actual light so CMYK make the colors go dull.... - mayur_vaghela@yahoo.co.uk
Colour is the perceived result of the interaction of light with the sensitive receptors in our eyes. For there to be colour, there must be light. While water appears to be transparent, it is not totally so, and large volumes of it are opaque - they don't let light penetrate. So, at the depths of the ocean there is no light, and therefore no colour. What we perceive as white is actually the total reflection of white ligth by an object, Black is either the total absence of light or the total absoption of white light by an object - so black ink absorbs all white light, but the bottom of the ocean is total darkness. So, the water is not actually a different colour as we descend, it is the different quantities of light which make it appear darker and darker as we go deeper.