If it is really light purple then maybe, but if not, no. You'll end up with a super dark maroon or perhaps even a slighly plum color.
only if you use blood red
Let me guess...you have a bottle of black ink and you want to do a red tattoo. The ONLY way you can do a red tattoo is to use red ink. No amount of dilution will make black ink red.
Yellow red and blue
No. There is no nickel in black ink. There is a concentration of iron in red ink. The majority of people that are allergic to any ink are the ones that are allergic to iron.
I have had a few allergic reactions from myself and other people when I use Smart Tattoo Ink. Real puffy and red skin, sometimes the ink won't stay in, I would sugjest StarBright.
red Eternal Inks or Starbrite or Silverback
Unfortunately, it is not possible to separate the primary colors from purple ink because purple is a secondary color made by combining primary colors (blue and red). Once the ink is mixed to create purple, you cannot easily extract the primary colors from it.
Blue and red together make purple. For a different shade of purple you can change the shades of blue and red or use more of one color than the other.
His collar is red in the Warriors book but some people got a bad cover for the manga and it looks purple. So it is red. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It is purple.
For this, you will add very small amounts of black ink to the red and thoroughly mix the two until you come to a hue that you are happy with. Other than this, you can simply buy the shade of ink that you are wanting to save yourself the time. If you do mix the ink yourself, write down and keep notes on how many drops you added to the ink that gave you the desired shade so you don't have to go through the process all over again if you are mixing the ink per tattoo as opposed to mixing it by bottle.
According to the American Red Cross Blood Donor Eligibility page, there is a 12-month deferral if you received the tattoo in an unlicensed tattoo facility. But if you received the tattoo in a state-licensed tattoo facility (using sterile needles, not reusing ink), then then there is no deferral.
According to the American Red Cross Blood Donor Eligibility page, there is a 12-month deferral if you received the tattoo in an unlicensed tattoo facility. But if you received the tattoo in a state-licensed tattoo facility (using sterile needles, not reusing ink), then then there is no deferral.