Concealed level crossing
red white and blue
white with red vertical stripes
A red marker
Red ones.
In the United States, red buoys have red lights, and are even numbered. If the are unlit they are in the shape of a semi-cone and are called "nun" buoys. The day markers are red triangles.
17 markers
Keep the marker to your port (left) side. Heading down stream it'll be to starboard. Usually there will be a red marker to the starboard headed upstream, and you should keep between the buoys , sometimes there will be midstream buoys, or even preferred channel markers, marking safe deep water channels. They will be red over green, triangular, lettered or even numbered for starboard markers, and green over red, square, lettered or odd numbered for port side markers. Center channel markers may be yellow or white, hazard markers are black over white, or black over red. Inter-coastal waterway markers are yellow. States have their own marker systems, heading up current though in all systems will be green to port, red to starboard and black marking hazards. Lighted markers follow the same rules, green to port, red to starboard and white for hazards heading in from the sea/ocean. If the lights are moving they're on a vessel, stopped or anchored vessel should only show a white light or lights. Yellow lights indicate a vessel under tow.
yellow and pink makes brown if you use markers mix yellow and pink you'll get the color brown. Yellow a primary colour and pink a pastel of red, also a primary colour will result in a peachy orange.
white, orange and red
98 markers.He has 98 in all.
The red cross is red. The background is white and not red because other wise it would just be a red block.
The difference would be that is white and one is red you guess which is which