Wiki User
∙ 14y agoRed
Wiki User
∙ 14y agomahogany
Sunlight: yellow Yellow light: yellow
It appears red. That's the main reason it's called "a red cloth".
It would depend on whether or not the dye for the cloth was developed in natural light , sunlight is a natural light , light created by some forms of man made light give off their own spectrum of color , a dye developed under these types of light would not appear the same in sunlight. But generally most dyes are quality controlled to appear as they should under natural light.
I'm assuming green because yellow and blue mixed together (I know you aren't mixing colors) makes green. It might just look like a yellow cloth under blue light, with no change at all. But I could be wrong.
mahogany
Sunlight: yellow Yellow light: yellow
Black
It appears red. That's the main reason it's called "a red cloth".
It would depend on whether or not the dye for the cloth was developed in natural light , sunlight is a natural light , light created by some forms of man made light give off their own spectrum of color , a dye developed under these types of light would not appear the same in sunlight. But generally most dyes are quality controlled to appear as they should under natural light.
I'm assuming green because yellow and blue mixed together (I know you aren't mixing colors) makes green. It might just look like a yellow cloth under blue light, with no change at all. But I could be wrong.
When illuminated with blue light.
The cloth would be wite because if it were any other color the colored light would mix with the color of the cloth and make a different color.
The banana is absorbing red and green light, but not blue. It appears black when illuminated with a blue light.
No
black
Any light that doesn't have any red in it.