No one can answer this question accurately. It depends on the coins!
Yellow in light is a mix of full red and full green The hex value for this is: #FFFF00 In RGB: 255, 255, 0
Wet mortar mix about 1 cup in a pound.
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.
Half Vodka, Half Triple Sec and some Ice
you might be able to, but it depends on how thick or thin your cake mix is
It would depend on the country of origin, date, condition, mintmarks, and even what it was made of.
With no rare dates they likely are only valued for the silver.
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Just mix a lot of random colors.
Random
random colors
That's going to depend on how many small, light coins, large, heavy coins, and medium size, medium-weight coins there are in the mix. You could have 272 US half-dollars in one bag, 617 nickels in another bag, and 1,360 dimes in another bag, and each of the three bags would weigh 6.8 pounds. And also by the way ... when I read the question, I understand "lbs" to mean the "weight" of the coins, and to have nothing to do with the "Pound" unit of several world currencies.
You mix them without measuring anything out.
Kilometers are distances, pounds are weights - they do not mix
9
I would use about 7.5 pounds of coleslaw
I believe it's a white noise