Taking away red from orange leaves yellow, and when you add blue to yellow, you get green.
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
Cool colors are generally colors with more blue in them and warm colors have more orange. Blue is the coolest color, and therefore orange is the warmest because it is the farthest color away from blue (they are compliments). The color wheel can be divided into global warm/cool halves, with blues, purples, and greens on the cool side and reds, oranges, and yellows on the warm side. However, every color can have local warm/cool variations. A yellow-green is warmer than a blue-green. A purple-red is cooler than an orange-red.Warm/cool has nothing to do with light/dark as the previous answer incorrectly stated. A dark orange (brown) color is warmer than a light blue and, similarly, a light orange is also warmer than a dark blue.
The temperature of an orange flame on a Bunsen burner is typically around 1,100 degrees Celsius (2,010 degrees Fahrenheit). The color of the flame is an indication of the temperature, with blue flames being hotter than yellow or orange flames.
Any colors other than red, blue, and yellow. Colors such as green, purple, and orange are all examples of non primary colors. green,purple,orange,violet, green,purple,orange,violet, green,purple,orange,violet, Wrong. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green blue.
This is impossible. Green is the secondary color of blue and yellow while orange is the secondary color of red and yellow. Since both are secondary colors one cannot be altered to make the other. Although a true green is not possible, you can try to achieve a hue of green that is close enough to what you're looking for. Since red and yellow make orange. Start off with a small amount of orange and add yellow to it until it is close enough to a yellow as possible. You'll more than likely end up with a light orange. Then gradually add blue to it until you've reached the green you desire- ALTHOUGH, I don't see why you would do this if you already have yellow in hand. Just mix yellow and blue.
Yes orange is darker than light blue.
blue i my opioon is better
true
Strange question, but it is 3.
green,yellow, blue-grey,yellow-green, yellow-orange and orange
Blue is more popular! improvement/edition: I agree that blue is more popular than orange, because only a few people I know like the color orange. I honestly don't like orange as much as blue, but I don't like blue to much, either!
Yes
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
A moldy orange? You're going to need to be a bit more specific than that.
A blue flame means you are getting a good gas/air mixture. If it is orange or yellow then there is more gas than air and should be adjusted.
It's not. White is the hottest. Then blue, yellow orange, red.
orange blue than light