Since blue is a primary color there are no two colors to mix to create blue so you would just have to use a darker color blue and white.
No. Blue and green, as well as red, form the three primary colours in light. Blue is a colour in its own right.The Primary colours are Blue, Yellow and Red. Blue and Yellow make Green.(With paint the colours are blue, red and yellow, and in printing it's cyan, magenta and yellow).
In paint and other colours, it's red and white. But in a light, its blue and red which make magenta.
Berries, they can mush them up to make different colours. Red berries would make red paint, Blue would make blue. They could also add mashed flowers to give it texture or a different colour.
blue and redLucia
Well, if you are referring to Blue, Red and Yellow as classic colours; you can't make them. Blue, Red and Yellow are primary colours. The ones that are natural. You use these colours, along with shades of black and white, to create other colours like Purple (red and blue) and Green (yellow and blue) or orange (red and yellow). Therefore, creating 'classic colours' would be virtually impossible. The three colours I mentioned are almost always on a paint tray and you can not really do a painting/drawing with out them.
You can't make blue with primary colours because blue is a primary colour the primary colours are blue, red and yellow
To make light blue paint, mix blue and white paint together until you achieve the desired shade of light blue.
To make pale blue, mix blue and white together :)
Blue and yellow, or blue and green.
Blue and yellow.
Red and Brown
They don't. Green is a secondary colour derived by mixing the primary colours yellow and blue. Purple is a secondary colour derived by mixing the primary colours red and blue. If you could remove the yellow or red from the secondary colour you could get a blue, however in paint, it is not possible to remove pigment from a mixture.