If you mix them togther you get coloured papper pasting
Yellow is a primary colour, one of three. Cranberry is a form of Red, also a primary colour. Mixing them together will result in a bright orange colour.
Used paper is first collected and sorted by type and quality. It is then cleaned and processed into pulp by mixing it with water. The pulp is then pressed and dried to form new paper sheets.
Blue is a primary colour. Orange is a secondary colour made up of equal parts red and yellow. Mixing the three primary colours together results in some form of a brown or in some cases dark grey colour.
Pink is made by mixing the two colors ; RED and WHITE. Try this on a paper; Color red and on top white. It will form pink.
Blue and Yellow mixed together form green when painting. In light green is a primary color and cannot be made by mixing other colers.
Here is an example sentence with the word "react":The chemicals in a red litmus paper react with a base to form the colour blue.
No colour because Yellow is a Primary Colour
You cannot mix grey with a single colour to form yellow. Yellow is made by mixing green and red. The addition of grey would render a dark shade of yellow.
An accidental colour is a colour which often appears - as a form of optical illusion - when two other colours are placed together. For example, upon seeing a red wafer upon a sheet of white paper and defocusing, some people may see a faint green image.
Mixing sodium hydroxide and calcium nitrate will not form a precipitate. Instead, it will form solutions of sodium nitrate and calcium hydroxide.
The thing I know and that I was asking for is: What % of Blue+what % of Red+what % of Green you have to set in your colour TV to form white and with what % of luminance? I understand that white will form by mixing red 30% + Green 59% + Blue 11% and wil give a white 100%, Is it this correct?
Could easily turn blue/purple in reaction to paper fibers.