Dark gray 66+66+66% White 100+100+100%
Orange is blue's complement. They are across each other on the color wheel. If you mix them in equal parts you will get brown.
first u mix red and blue and u get purple. then u mix red and yellow and u get orange. then u mix blue and yellow and u get green. then u mix purple and orange and u get brown. then u mix orange and green and u get skin color but maybe browner. then u mix green and purple and u get turquoise. then u mix turquoise, brown and skin color and u should get black or dark grey. depends on the lightness and darkness of the color.
You can't mix colours to make the primary colours which are Red, Blue and Yellow. You can make purple by red and blue, orange by red and yellow, green by blue and yellow or brown by red, blue and purple.
lavender None of my (cake decorating) books had that in their color charts, so I mixed equal amounts of each color to find out, and the resulting color was a dark green. The red and yellow colors were "true" colors, the blue was a medium shade of blue. So if you use a darker shade of blue, the green will be even darker.
black
a light smoke color
Gray
black.
You can mix any two colors on the color wheel to get gray. Red and green, blue and orange, purple and yellow, etc.
If I am thinking of the same color, it is a mix between a really dark navy blue and a dark gray.
White, and a small amount of black
what is the color pink and gray
If you mix light blue and light grey you will get a darker, duller version of the blue. Of course this depends on how much of each color you mix together. For example, if you mix equal parts of both colors you will more than likely get a muddy, grayish, non-color; but if you mix just a dab of grey into the blue, you could come up with a soft blue.
black and white for a slight gray; sometimes adding sky blue to it can get the color you want
black and white
You get gray-lime.