Assuming you want to cover up the purple so you can start over: buy the type of paint that covers water stains, deep colors. Kilz makes a paint that does that. Then, paint over that with the color you do want.
add purple.
conducting that experiment, hexane turned a fushia/purple colour
they don't have to be if you don't want them to. mine are purple/tan and white
The garlic turned purple due to a chemical reaction that occurs when garlic is exposed to acidic conditions or certain minerals in the soil. This reaction causes the garlic to change color from its original white or off-white hue to a purple or bluish tint.
No, the color purple is a physical property of an object that results from the absorption and reflection of certain wavelengths of light. It is not the result of a physical or chemical change, but rather the interaction of light with the object's molecules.
I put dark purple hair dye over teal and it turned a purple-blue
The cool weather is the factor that caused the leaves turned into purple color of some st.paulia species.
The colour would change to a purple, dark purple colour.
Purple is already and combination of blue and red. You would have to eliminate the blue.
No monkes cannot change color.
Garlic turns purple when it is exposed to acidic conditions or when it reacts with certain metals. This color change is due to a chemical reaction that causes pigments in the garlic to change color.
In acidic conditions, the color of hibiscus that is initially purple can turn red or pink. This change in color is due to the change in pH affecting the pigments in the hibiscus flower.