Magenta and green are complementary colors, meaning they sit opposite each other on the color wheel. When combined in equal parts, they effectively cancel each other out, resulting in a neutral or grayish color. The exact shade may vary depending on the medium and proportions used, but generally, you won't get a distinct new color.
red, blue and yellow are the primary colors Wrong. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green blue.
3 primary colours..... red, yellow and green... Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. (Check your colour printer's cartridges some time). Televison: red, green, blue.
No, it's not. Primary colors are red, blue and yellow. And they are not either. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. (Check you colour printer's cartridges some time). Televison: red, green, blue.
No, green plus blue is bluish green (or possibly greenish blue).
What they've always taught in school was: the primary triad is red, blue and yellow the secondary triad is orange (red plus yellow), purple (red plus blue) and green (blue plus yellow). In reality, the primary colors are NOT red, blue and yellow. They are cyan, magenta and yellow. If you use these colors as your primaries, the secondary triad is red (magenta plus yellow), green (cyan plus yellow) and blue (cyan plus magenta). Red, green and blue are also the primary colors of light, which gives further credence to the fact cyan, magenta and yellow are the primaries--cyan absorbs red light, magenta absorbs green light and yellow absorbs blue light. And finally, I can almost guarantee your printer (assuming it's color) does NOT have red or blue ink in it, but it does have cyan and magenta ink.
burnt orange, olive green, blue or black is going to be your answer
The complementary color of magenta is green.
A red light will be needed to combine with magenta light to produce green light. Green light is the complementary color to magenta, so by mixing red light with magenta light, the result will be green light.
Green and magenta light combine to create white light.
Combining green and magenta will produce a dark purple color.
Magenta is the opposite color of green on the color wheel, so it absorbs green light. When magenta pigment is present, it absorbs green wavelengths of light, making magenta appear as a mixture of blue and red.
white
Green and magenta are complementary colors, so when mixed together, they create a shade of gray.
When you mix red and blue, you get magenta. When you shine a green light on magenta, the green light will be absorbed by the magenta, resulting in a dark color or black, depending on the intensity of the green light.
Magenta, like Blue and Green Puppy, is a girl.
Magenta absorbs green light. It appears as a combination of red and blue, which results in the absorption of green wavelengths of light.