You pretty much just get yellow-orange, like a brighter, lighter orange... sometimes it can be brown-ish though
Red + Yellow = Orange
One part red (a primary colour) plus one part orange (a secondary colour) will result in red- orange (a tertiary colour).
Red plus yellow makes orange. This is a basic principle of color mixing in both additive and subtractive color systems, where combining these two primary colors results in a secondary color. The resulting hue can vary slightly depending on the specific shades of red and yellow used.
It is black yellow and purple in its feathers. Plus it has a yellow- orange beak
Yellow plus orange typically results in a shade of yellow-orange, often referred to as amber or gold. This new color blends the brightness of yellow with the warmth of orange, creating a vibrant hue. The exact shade can vary depending on the proportions of yellow and orange used in the mix.
it depends which primary color and which secondary color. For example orange plus red will just get you red orange because orange contains red. But orange plus blue will get you a shade of brown because they are complimentary colors.
Begin with what will represent the dominant color (as found on the traditional RYB color wheel). Let us say that primary blue, is the dominant color to be used. Follow blue across the color wheel, directly opposite, and find the secondary color orange. The two colors adjacent (next to) orange are the split-complementaries, namely yellow-orange and red-orange. To use a limited palette driven by split-complementary colors, assign the non-primary colors to be primaries for the sake of color mixing. In other words, using the colors above...blue would be the dominant primary, yellow-orange would play the part of yellow for the sake of mixing, and red-orange would be the choice for red. To mix say the color green take blue...plus the yellow-orange. It will not be the common green one ordinarily thinks of as comes from blue plus yellow, but it will be a green unique and true to the split-complementary palette chosen. The painter will find a natural working color harmony imbued by this palette strategy.
Red plus yellow plus blue are the three primary colors in subtractive color mixing, often used in art and design. When mixed together in equal parts, they create a neutral color, often resulting in a dark brown or muddy color. However, in additive color mixing (like with light), combining red, yellow, and blue can yield different results based on the specific shades used. Overall, the outcome depends on the medium and context in which the colors are combined.
orange and purple combined make a reddish- brown. The reason is orange is red plus yellow, and purple is red plus blue, the three primary colors are red, yellow, and blue. When they are combined they make brown. You will add one additional red in using the orange, thus, the reddish hue in the brown color resulting.
Red Orange Yellow*GreenBlue Indigo VioletRed is to Orange: Blue is to Indigo.INDIGO.AnswerRed is to orange as blue is to green. Red plus yellow is orange; blue plus yellow is green.
tertiary color (mixture of primary colors-red, yellow, blue, and secondary colors-orange,purple(violet), and green.) the tertiary colors are: red orange, yellow orange, yellow green, blue green, and blue purple(violet) The above implies the primaries are red, yellow blue. They are not. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green, blue.
orange