lavender
None of my (cake decorating) books had that in their color charts, so I mixed equal amounts of each color to find out, and the resulting color was a dark green. The red and yellow colors were "true" colors, the blue was a medium shade of blue. So if you use a darker shade of blue, the green will be even darker.
If you mix equal amounts of the lighter versions of all the primary colours together (such as pink, light yellow and light blue), you would get grey, the lighter version of black.
In color theory, particularly in the additive color model (like RGB), yellow is created by combining red and green light, not by subtracting blue from white. In the subtractive color model (like CMYK), white is the absence of pigment, while yellow is a primary color. Thus, the statement "yellow equals white minus blue" is not accurate in either model.
Red, Blue, and Yellow are the primary colors.
Green.
I think the color is red because red, yellow, and blue are primary colors. The true answer is that there is no color, it is literally impossible, because they are primary colors. Think about it. Red and yellow makes ORANGE. Yellow and blue makes green. Really the only way to make yellow blue is to paint over it.
In pigments: Equal amounts of red and blue are used to make purple. Mixing equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow (the three primary colors) will yield brown. In light: Equal amounts of red and blue make magenta (a lighter, more reddish shade of purple). Equal amounts of magenta and yellow make white.
Well yellow and blue make green as long as you have equal amounts of both colours mixed in.
Equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow make basic grey.
In an emmissive (light producing) environment, equal amounts of red, yellow and blue will combine to produce white.
Yellow, I believe. Not yellow. If you are using equal amounts it would make grey. Blue and yellow mixed make green then add equal amount of red becomes grey.
You would add blue to yellow to make green. The combination of yellow and blue creates different shades of green, depending on the amounts of each color used.
Try red, blue and yellow, less yellow and equal amounts of red and blue.
mix equal(ish) amounts of blue and yellow, then add some white until it's the desired color! :D
You would get a light greenish-yellow color when mixing blue and green, then adding yellow. The final color will depend on the specific shades and amounts of each color used in the mixture.
The color green is made by mixing the color blue and yellow. Yellow and Blue. mix yellow and blue blue and yellow
Two primary colors mix to make a secondary color. Red and blue make purple, yellow blue make green, and yellow and red make orange. Purple, green, and orange are the secondary colors.
Orange is a secondary colour achieved by mixing equal parts red and yellow ( red 1 + yellow 1 = orange 2) Purple is a secondary colour achieved by mixing equal parts red and blue (red 1 + blue 1 = purple 2) Yellow is a primary colour (yellow 2) So if we are mixing equal amounts of orange, purple & yellow we will get ... 2 parts red + one part blue + 3 parts yellow = a yellowish brown on the warm side.