You will get a gray color and it depends on how much white you put because it will be a lighter gray with more white
this question is so easy! what kind of person would ask this question! anyway the answer is grey.
gray
u get gray.
yes
Grey
gray
Gray
Gray
gray
It depends how dark it is .But people think it is grey and they are probably right if you know a scientist please ask this question......... ''What does lack and white mixed together make?''
Some shade of gray.
you'd get grey.
gray
Mixing black paint and white paint gives you grey paint.
Black black and white makes grey.
When you mix black and white paint, you get gray.
pinkish grey
grey
brownAs you mix colors, they tend to get darker, ending up as black
you mix blue, white, and black
When you mix black and white paint, you get gray.
you don't
Regarding light and color - when you mix all primary colors together you get white. Black is the absence of light. Regarding paint and ink - when you mix all primary colors together you get black. White is the absence of color.
Impossible to say - try mixing just half a spoonful (or less) of each and paint the mix on some scrap, allow to dry and see what happens.
If you mix all colors of light you will get white. If you mix all colors of pigment/paint you will get black.
Gray paint contains pigment from both white paint and black paint. The obtain an intermediate shade of gray mix equal parts of both white pigment and black pigment. If a darker shade of gray is desired the black pigment should be increased and the white pigment decreased. If a lighter shade of gray is desirable increase the white pigment and decrease the black pigment.
BEcause its,like mixing paint, white is plain but when u mix it its no longer white but a lighter dkin tone of brown
mix black and yellow
black white and blue
Black comes in two mediums: pigment and light If you mix all the paint pigments you get brown. If you mix colored light beams,you get white,thus the absence of light will give you black. Stated another way: "All the paint is black;but all the light is white"....and black absorbs light while white reflects it. Try shining a flashlight on a black surface and see what you get. Most black pigment is either carbon black or iron oxide.
A mix of black and white. Make sure it is metallic paint or you will just have grey!
In paint, black. In light, white. In practice, if you mix all paint colours, you get a murky dark brown close to black. But the theory outlined above is correct.