purple
Answer 1) Yes and no, purple is a close opposite of yellow. (see answer 2) Answer 2) Nope, blue is the opposite of yellow. Purple is the opposite of a kind of sea foam blue. If you have any more questions regarding the opposites of colors, a lot of these questions could be answered by looking at a color wheel.
Umm... They're yellow!!! I think it will be kind of boring if everything was orange. ANSWER: Actually, some banana varieties are close to being orange in color, although they are more of a red. Not all bananas are yellow.
canary parrot pigeon toucan turkey colors: yellow indigo purple orange silver bronze and more
Black, purple (in different shades), yellow, red...there are more..
Still brown, just a more purple-y brown. if you wanna make it more brown just add more yellow
Yellow and purple, they are his team's colors. He like yellow more though.
Well, if you are trying to dye a pale yellow cotton blouse a deep purple, you will get an ugly gray. That's what happened to me. I liked the blouse, but I don't look good in yellow; I had some purple dye, so I gave it a shot. Then I used a color stripper to remove the purple and the blouse ended up a grayish-lavender. Not the color I was hoping for.
you have to have the yellow pink and purple set or if you don't have that set you have to get more emblems until it appears in the black market
The name of the plum that has a yellow green skin and yellow flesh is the yellow plum. The yellow plum is a little bit sweeter than the purple plum which is also more common.
Brown --------------------------------- Mixing the purple with yellow at a 3:1 ratio will give you a gray which can be lightened by adding white. All palettes are not the same, however, so you have to experiment with the reds, blue, yellows and purples you have to see exactly what colors you get. The comments above are just a guideline to start with.
In pigments: Equal amounts of red and blue are used to make purple. Mixing equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow (the three primary colors) will yield brown. In light: Equal amounts of red and blue make magenta (a lighter, more reddish shade of purple). Equal amounts of magenta and yellow make white.
I've noticed that when fresh, they are more red, then change to purple, then get some yellow in them as they get older.