Watercolor:Burnt Sienna mixed with some Yellow Ochre ,it should end up like Raw Sienna ,compare the two colors to see if it does.
Raw Sienna - album - was created in 1969.
5 Parts Cadmium Yellow + 5 Parts Raw Sienna + 1 Part Titanium white = Yellow Oxide If it is more white than what you desire very sparingly add watered down raw sienna until you reach the shade you want. For something a little more snazzy try adding cadmium yellow, or for something more light and subtle add the watered down white.
You can get great results from the most basic of pallets. Try raw sienna layered with burnt umber and maybe a bit of sepia. Don't mix the colour on you pallet, start with lightest colour (raw sienna) and paint a layer. Let it dry completely, then paint on your next layer. The second layer can even be the same colour. Don't use too much of the sepia or it will "deaden" your painting. Don't forget to leave some areas white. That will give your trumpet sparkle.
You can make a range of "beige" tints by diluting "brown" hues in your palette such as: raw umber or burnt umber -- raw sienna or burnt sienna. These mixtures, if diluted with enough water will be very transparent allowing the paper to show through. So, if you desire a more "flat" appearance to your "beige" try adding Naples Yellow to your "brown" hue.
Start with red and add brown to get the exact shade you want. Mix the brown carefully, adding a little at a time until the rust shade becomes the exact one you want.Rust is a browned shade of orange. Mix red and yellow to achieve orange, then add a small amount at a time of blue to brown the colour down. Continue to adjust the colour until you get your desired rust colour.
If I were using oil paints I would start with raw sienna, which is already close to light oak, then add some raw umber and white, with perhaps a small amount of burnt umber. If you have a piece of oak wood in front of you (or an on-line photograph) you can adjust the amounts of each colour to obtain a very close match.
no
None. Red is a primary color.
Yes because it is not good to eat eggs raw
I have before
No ! ! !
"Buff" is a very vague term used for a wide range of pale yellowish-browns. It originally meant a type of leather with this colouring (again in a wide variety of shades). If using oil paints I would start with white, add a very little yellow ochre and maybe a tiny amount of raw umber or raw sienna.