White light contains lights of all frequences within it. So yes, white light is a mixture of all colours of light.
White for light source or black (actually dirty brownish) for reflected light. White
When you mix red, yellow, and blue light, you create white light. This is known as additive color mixing, where the mixing of different colors of light results in the appearance of white light.
white lights is all colors equal. look through a prism at tube you will see rainbow effect. white paper reflects all light, while black absorbs all colors. if paper is green it will asorb all colors but green which is reflected back to eye. what ever color you see something are the color(s) it reflects.
Red, green, and blue. If you go to a play and look at the lights above the stage they usually have a red, blue, or green covering. When they mix they make white light. Hope this helps :)
When yellow and magenta light are combined, they produce white light. This occurs because yellow light contains red and green wavelengths, while magenta light contains red and blue wavelengths. When these colors mix, the red wavelengths from both colors combine, along with the green from yellow and the blue from magenta, resulting in a balanced spectrum that appears white.
Paint: You cannot mix colors to make white because white is the lack of color. Light: You must mix all of the colors of the spectrum in order to create a white light.
If you mix all colors of light you will get white. If you mix all colors of pigment/paint you will get black.
To create white light, you would mix all the colors of the rainbow together. These colors are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
White as a color is the absence of all colors. You cannot mix any colors to make it. White as light is the inclusion all colors in the viable spectrum. The make white light you need to mix every color together as light.
If you don't add white [which is really an ABSCENCE of color ], you get black. And if you do add white... You get grey. :3333 Not really...
Colors that can mix with white to create lighter shades include pastel colors such as light pink, light blue, and light yellow. Mixing these colors with white can create softer and more subtle hues.
If you are talking about light and not pigment, then the blending of all the frequencies of visible light gives white. It's more of a continuum of frequencies rather than a mix of discrete colors.
Regarding light and color - when you mix all primary colors together you get white. Black is the absence of light. Regarding paint and ink - when you mix all primary colors together you get black. White is the absence of color.
If you mix all the colours as lights (red light plus green light plus blue light etc) then you get white light but if you mix all the colours together as opaque pigments or paints then you get black.
All colors of light mixed together make white.
To get white light, you must mix all the colors (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet)
In paint, black. In light, white. In practice, if you mix all paint colours, you get a murky dark brown close to black. But the theory outlined above is correct.