We normally think of Black as a color, but we need to understand that Black is no color at all. Black is instead absense of color, or rather absense of light.
When you turn off all light in a dark room, then you see nothing. You have successfully "created" black.
As for "black" objects we see, this is another aspect of exactly the same thing.
The black object simply does not reflect enough light for us to distinguish it as anything but black, or lack of light.
In other words, the black objects absorb as much as possible of the light shining on them.
The RGB color model creates colors by mixing light, red, green and blue. All video displays are RGB. Since it is impossible to print a light mixture printers are able to simulate full color by using four colors, cyan, magenta, yellow and black. Most new color laser copy machines automatically convert RGB to CMYK when a digital file is sent, but the results may be off color.
In the CMYK color mixing model, when you mix cyan and yellow you get green.
black
The original complementary color model only saw colors in primary and secondary pairs such as red-green, yellow-violet, and blue-orange. In the newer RGB model, complementary colors that are mixed at the right amounts will produce either black or white.
In the CMYK color mixing model, when you mix cyan and yellow you get green.
the first model t was black
You could pick any color you wanted as long as it was black.
There were more black Model T's produced than any other color but they were not all black. The original early Greens and Blues were all but black, and could easily be taken as black.
The color is 535 Medium Gold Mahogany Brown
The Model-T Ford.
Usually CMYK - Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black
I believe it was black. Henry Ford is alleged to have proclaimed, "You can have any color you want, as long as it's black." From 1914 to 1925 the Model T was only available in black.