A mixture of blue and yellow tiny dots on a printed page creates the visual perception of green due to the principles of color mixing. This process is known as "halftoning," where tiny dots of different colors are placed closely together, allowing the human eye to blend them into a new color from a distance. This technique is commonly used in printing to reproduce a wide range of colors without using solid inks. The resulting effect is an optical illusion that relies on the viewer's perception rather than the physical mixing of pigments.
Combining blue, yellow, and green would result in a mixture that appears as a shade of brown. Mixing complementary colors like yellow and blue can create green, and adding green to that mix would deepen the tone to brown.
The atmosphere scatters blue light more than yellow light.
White light minus yellow light appears as a bluish color, due to the absence of yellow light in the spectrum. This phenomenon is known as color subtraction or color mixture.
Yellow and green combined create the color yellow-green.
yellow and green. (2 yellow, 1 blue)
Mixing yellow and blue will usually result in green. The specific shade of green will depend on the ratios of yellow and blue used in the mixture.
Mixing yellow and blue will result in green, in relation to the percent of mixture of the two colour.
brown is a mixture of yellow blue and red. All of the prime colors.
Brown. Green is just a mixture of blue and yellow, and if you mix all the primary colours, you get brown.
the mixture of the primary colors (red, yellow, and blue).
Green already contains yellow - It's a mixture of blue and yellow.
It is the mixture of yellow and blue, green is a secondary color.