Red and Blue would form purple - as you add more blue into the mixture the colour created would be a darker purple, you can also add TINY amounts of yellow to create a brown/purple outcome, too much yellow to the mix would create a dirty looking green.
Red paint and blue paint makes purple paint.
mix varying amounts of red and blue with brown to make purple
Depending on the density of the two colours, and the amount of paint that you are mixing, you will get a range of purple to lavender colours.
blue and redLucia
Purple! Have a close look at the colour wheel. Let me explain what the colour wheel is. The colour wheel is all about the Primary Colours (colours you cannot make with other colours). The Primary Colours are Blue, Yellow and Red. Blue + Red = Purple Red + Yellow = Orange Yellow + Blue = Green Purple, Orange and Green are known as Secondary Colours. There are also colours that compliment each other in the colour wheel. If you have a look at a colour wheel and choose a colour, then see what colour is OPPOSITE the colour you chose, you find it's Complimentary Colour!
The three primary colours in painting are Red, Yellow & Blue. The secondary colours are the result of a mixture of two of the primary colours: Red & Blue - Purple; Red & Yellow - Orange; and Blue & Yellow - Green.
The colours: Blue and Red mixed together make purple.
Red+Blue=Purple
Depending on the density of the two colours, and the amount of paint that you are mixing, you will get a range of purple to lavender colours.
It makes: Fudge brown
Red, with blue added in moderation, will make purple.
These are the colours used by the suffragettes to paint posters,banners etc.
It makes a sort of brownish shade.
These are the colours used by the suffragettes to paint posters,banners etc.
The general rule is that if you paint with dark colours your room will look smaller. But, you could paint one wall purple and that wall should be the wall getting the most sun.
Blue and red make "Aqua Marine" (LOL) Yeah right, it makes purple
Primary means of chief importance; principal. In the case of colours, red, yellow and blue are the three primary colours, because they can't be reproduced by mixing other colours. For instance, blue and yellow makes green. Red and blue makes purple. So green and purple are not primary as then would not exist unless primary colours were mixed.
Purple paint!
blue and redLucia