Metallic means being shiny, which in turn means being reflective; you can not make a metallic effect just by mixing colours.
Gold is a bit on the orange side of yellow (1/6 of the way towards red), and slightly dark-ish (80% of fully bright) - roughly. (There is also "saturation"; mixing with white gives a lower saturation; I make gold about 93% saturated, which means 93% of full strength. (This does *not* mean mixing with 7% white; white is a bit weaker, so you need a bit more of it.) )
I believe it is yellow, brown, and white.
no, but yellow is. classic colors are red, blue, and yellow. classic colors are colors that people use to mix to make new colors. Gold is made by mixing yellow and silver.
If you mix the colors red and green you'll get the color brown.
You can not do this. Red blue and yellow are colors that can not be made by another color.
Oh, dude, gold is not a tertiary color. Tertiary colors are made by mixing primary and secondary colors, like when you mix red and orange to get some fancy tertiary color. Gold is just... gold. It's like the diva of colors, standing alone and shining bright.
What? Red is a primary color, you can not mix colors to make red. You can use red to make other colors.
When red and yellow colors mix together, they create the color orange.
you can mix the colours red and blue
Since red is a primary color, you can not mix colors together to make it.
yellow
you mix the colors red and purple to get the amazing color offuchsia.
To mix the color red, you can combine equal parts of primary colors like magenta and yellow. Adjust the ratios of these colors to achieve the shade of red you desire. Add a touch of white to lighten the red or black to darken it.
Mix Red and White to get pink. Mix Red and Yellow to get Orange.