heres' the trick, you your hands, not a mixer.
It depends on the missing ingredient. Missing sugar will leave the cookie bland. Missing egg will result in a very crumbly cookie. Missing chocolate chips will result in a sugar cookie. See?
Nopeee.
No, mixing is adding two signals together, modulation is more like multiplying two signals. IN mixing, the result has the same frequencies as the input signals. In modulation, the result is the sum and difference frequencies.
Mixing the colors violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red together in equal parts would result in a muddy brown or black color. Mixing all colors of the visible spectrum will generally result in a dark or neutral color due to the complex interactions of different wavelengths of light.
Either you get Dark Blue or Black mixing red and green makes brown
Mixing the colors red and yellow will result in the color orange.
Mixing purple with white will result in a lighter shade of purple, commonly known as lavender.
The result of mixing maroon and burgundy would likely be a deeper shade of red with strong purple undertones.
That depends on whether you're mixing paint or mixing light.-- If you're mixing light, 'black' means no light at all, so the result isexactly the same green that you mix it with.-- If you're mixing paint, the result is something so yucky thatI don't even want to talk about it.
Mixing red and blue pigments makes a purple color. Mixing red and blue light, on the other hand, gives you magenta.
In general, if you mix secondary colors the result is brown. This can vary somewhat depending upon the proportions of what you are mixing.
Mixing red and blue together will result in the color purple.