Mixing 2 gallons of gray with 1 gallon of green will generally result in a muted or desaturated green color. The gray will tone down the brightness of the green, creating a more subdued shade, often leaning towards an olive or sage green, depending on the specific tones of gray and green used. The final color may vary slightly based on the proportions and shades involved.
You cannot mix grey with a single colour to form yellow. Yellow is made by mixing green and red. The addition of grey would render a dark shade of yellow.
OK, here's a tip-this is isn't Yahoo. Don't post things like that in the answer box because then people will think it is already answered and you will never know. :) I can't find anything, sorry, but if you have paints, then it is easy to mix gray and yellow together and find out. More fun that way too. :)
can you mix ceramic and porcelain tile on a bathroom floor
Oh, dude, gold is not a tertiary color. Tertiary colors are made by mixing primary and secondary colors, like when you mix red and orange to get some fancy tertiary color. Gold is just... gold. It's like the diva of colors, standing alone and shining bright.
90 to 140 lbs/cf depending on the mix
gray
You get gray-lime.
You get the color turquoise when you mix green and blue.
green
green
Green.
Mixing purple and green together will create a shade of brown or gray, depending on the specific shades and proportions of each color used.
Green with gray or black depending on your hue of green. The color olive drab is subjective, however, I have seen it used most in the military for the color of hand grenades.
You cannot mix grey with a single colour to form yellow. Yellow is made by mixing green and red. The addition of grey would render a dark shade of yellow.
You get blue-green.
Orange
you get green