Gold with a small bit of black
white is not a color but it is a base
If you want to get rid of the yellow by changing it into something like cream or champagne, you may well be out of luck. Any dye that you apply to shift the color will darken the yellow material. The "darkness" of the existing yellow will be "added to" the "darkness" of the new color, if that makes sense. You will end up headed for tan or beige before you have any chance at a cream. You can change the color, but you can't keep it as "light" as it is now. The cost of a color shift will be a darkening of the end product.
Answer "What do you get if you mix everyWhat colours? Light; if you mixed the colours of light together you get white, Though if you mean pigments then muddy brown would be correct. the question is too vague to be more accurate
short answer;The three primary colors are red, yellow, and blue; they are the only colors that cannot be made by mixing two other colors.
Complimentary colors are colors that are directly opposite to each other. such as red and green, yellow and violet, orange and blue. These are colors that give the most intense contrast. So any colors that are contrasting make up a complimentary color scheme. You can mix these colors to get beautiful "go together" colors. Take red and green, for example. You can lighten red to make a shade of pink and then contrast it with a shade of green that can be dark, light or anywhere in between.
what colors do I mix to get the color puce?wnt to dye a sweater that color
Red is a prime color, and therefore cannot be made with other colors.
None
14
White & a little black.
brown, red and purple
Blue is a primary color. No other colors make up the primary colors;(red, yellow, blue)
There are three colors that make up the color hazel. The colors are blue, green, and brown. People with hazel eyes generally have all of these colors visible.
You mix up the baige color that is dark and the white color to give out the skin color.
it's a primary color; yellow makes up yellow
Red is made using Magenta and yellow. Look up the CMYK color system for a diagram,
No. There are 2 totally different sets of genes that make up these two colors. Champagne is a dilution gene and there is now a test for it. (see Related Links for more information) Liver Chestnut is genetically just chestnut (same color as sorrel) but is visually darker. There are many shades of a red base color but they are still all a red base color. There is no test for Liver Chestnut because, at this time, it is not considered a color at all, but a way to describe a darker red horse. If you breed a gold champagne to a liver chestnut, you can get chestnut, gold champagne, liver chestnut or a darker gold champagne. The chances for Liver or the darker gold champagne is probably less than plain chestnut/sorrel or gold champagne. Chocolate Palomino is also not a "color" but is a word to describe a darker palomino. Could be a sooty gene darkening the palominos appearance. There are other colors that people call chocolate too and they are totally unrelated genetically to the palomino. Silver dapple is the best example.