Most battle film of World War II was shot in black and white due to a shortage of color film at that time. A small amount of color film does exist.
Red with some black or dark purple added to it.
red,yellow,blue,white and black 01/24/2010: White and Black are NOT primary colors. White is absent of color; none of the primary colors exist in White. You need primary colors to make other colors. If you were to mix together the 3 primary colors of red, yellow, and blue; don't be surprised when you see the result is Black. Black is all colors added and thus a made-color and combination of all colors.
all colors are in black. If you mix all the colors together you will receive black.
Dogs cannot see colors, their world is black, gray, and white, and shades between.
Artists refer to earth colors as colors that are not usually shown on the color wheel. Earth colors include Black, Gray, White, brown, beige, and tan. They can all be made by the 3 primary colors mixed together with some black and white added.
because it is dark and contains all the colors of the world
the black skirt obsorbes every color in the rainbow. see light the primary colors are the secondary colors of the color wheel. the light(comes from sun)colors mixed all together makes white otherwise the world would be black. the colors from paint markers and cryans when mixed all together makes black. hope this helps u:)
I don't think the answer will ever be revealed because if there werent colors it wouldn't just be black and white, because those are colors also.
Color never was added subsequently to "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, the movie was filmed from late 1938 through early 1939. The beginning and ending sequences deliberately were filmed in sepia to give an austere, hard-working, practical look to Kansas. The black-and-white type effects were intended to contrast sharply with the beautiful, lush, vibrant scenery of the magical lands of Oz.
Red,White,Black,Blue and Yellow
All commercial, full-color printing uses CMYK inks. CMYK works almost the complete opposite of RGB. There are three primary colors in this format: cyan, magenta and yellow. With color based on ink, the colors are added together to create black, subtracting from the white on the paper. This is called "Subtractive Color" - you start with white, then subtract light with ink to get black. True Black cannot be achieved with these colors, however. So, black is added - giving you CMYK ("K" is used to refer to black, so it is not confused with the "B" for blue). A fourth color, black, is added for economical and practical reasons, and is referred to by 'K' so as not to be confused with blue. By mixing varying amounts of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks, you can create most other colors.
All commercial, full-color printing uses CMYK inks. CMYK works almost the complete opposite of RGB. There are three primary colors in this format: cyan, magenta and yellow. With color based on ink, the colors are added together to create black, subtracting from the white on the paper. This is called "Subtractive Color" - you start with white, then subtract light with ink to get black. True Black cannot be achieved with these colors, however. So, black is added - giving you CMYK ("K" is used to refer to black, so it is not confused with the "B" for blue). A fourth color, black, is added for economical and practical reasons, and is referred to by 'K' so as not to be confused with blue. By mixing varying amounts of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks, you can create most other colors.