It would produce a purple colour.
Color theory and the color wheel is based on 3 primary colors that when mixed create 3 secondary colors (orange, green and purple). One has to be careful to specify colors produced by mixing light, mixing ink or paint and the optical appearance of a color. See the link below for a complete list of all colors.
Secondary colors are made by joining primary colors together. Red and yellow make orange. Blue and red make purple. Blue and yellow make green. Orange, purple and green are secondary colors. You can make all different colors by varying the amount of each color you use.
Colors resulting from the equal mixture of a primary color with either of the secondary colors adjacent to it on a color wheel.The tertiary colors are: yellow-orange, red-orange, red-violet, blue violet, blue-green, and yellow-green.hope this helps!source; http://www.artsparx.com/colorwheel.asp
A color resulting from the equal mixture of a primary color with either of the secondary colors adjacent to it on a color wheel.bluegreen, yellowgreen, redvioletAn Artist's PerspectiveI genuinely hope I'm not doing your homework here.A Primary colour is any colour which can not be achieved by mixing.There are three of them- red, yellow & blue.A Secondary colour is any colour achieved by mixing any two of the primary colours together in equal amounts.There are three of them as well- red & yellow = orange (1 part red + 1 part yellow)- red & blue =purple (1 part red + 1 part blue)- yellow & blue = green (1 part yellow + 1 part blue)A tertiary colour is any colour achieved by mixing equal parts of any secondary colour and one of the two primary colours that it is made of.There are six of them. (always stated as primary colour hyphen secondary colour - see below)- orange & red = Red-orange (2 parts red + 1 part yellow)- orange & yellow = Yellow-orange (2 parts yellow + 1 part red)- purple & red = Red-purple (2 parts red + 1 part blue)- purple & blue = Blue-purple (2 parts blue + 1 part red)- green & yellow = Yellow-green (2 parts yellow + 1 part blue)- green & blue = Blue-green (2 parts blue + 1 part yellow)This sort of thing is best understood by mixing the colours yourself, as opposed to doing it as an abstract equation.Get yourself some paint, a good palette and palette knife and take the time to mix your own colours.Art is a very hands on thing to do, mixing colour is a basic skill of art, and no amount of innate talent will make up for not having the basics.magenta, cyan & yellow are Primary colours.The colours that can be made by mixing primary colours are Secondary colours.Tertiary colours are colours that can be made by mixing primary and/or secondary colours.
Paul Cezanne uses primary colours, e.g. red, yellow, green.Answer 2Green is a secondary color.Cézanne of course used both primary and secondary colors, and a few extra nuances to boot.
A secondary color is created by mixing two primary colors together. For example, mixing red and yellow creates orange. A secondary mixed color is a combination of two secondary colors. For example, mixing green (from blue and yellow) with orange (from red and yellow) creates a tertiary color like amber or vermilion.
One made by mixing 2 primary colours. Primarys are red, blue and yellow.
Blue, Red, yellow are the three primary colours, and can't be created by mixing colours together.
Tertiary colors are created by mixing a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel. For example, mixing equal parts of red (a primary color) and orange (a secondary color made by mixing red and yellow) creates the tertiary color red-orange.
Mixing one primary colour with one secondary colour will result in a colour belonging to the tertiary family of colours.
Primary colours. Orange, purple and green are the three secondary colours. Any combination of those and/or primary colours after that are tertiary colours.I.E.red + yellow = orangered + blue = purpleblue + yellow = green
The secondary colors on the color wheel are orange, green, and violet. These colors are created by mixing two primary colors together.
Primary colors are the foundation for creating secondary colors. By mixing primary colors together (red, blue, yellow), secondary colors (purple, green, orange) can be produced. This relationship forms the basis for the color wheel and color theory.
You get it by mixing one primary and one secondary colour.
By mixing equal parts of two primary colors, you can create a secondary color. For example, combining red and blue creates purple, mixing red and yellow produces orange, and blending blue and yellow gives green. This is based on the subtractive color model, commonly used in art and design.
A secondary colour is two primary colours mixed together on the colour wheel.
For paints the primary colors are Red, Blue and Yellow. To achieve the secondary colors you mix 2 of the primary colors in equal amounts: Red + Blue = Purple Red + Yellow = Orange Blue + Yellow = Green