you get the color brown
If you add red to green, you get brown.
It makes a color there is no name for! It starts of brown, but if you paint it on something and let it dry for 24 hours, It turns into a new color! Try it and name the color yourself?
you get brown, believe it or not, if you used not primary colors or have used more than 1 color (including mixed colours which may represent 2 or more) then you either get grey or brown.By your color of paint (E.G. light brown) will determine the shade of your final result
It all depends on the shades of brown and blue you are using, personally, my guess is that it would just be a bluish-brown color, and that might be useful in painting, although I looked online, and someone said that they mixed brown and cerulean blue and it made a type of green. It really just depends on the shade of the two colors. If you own paints, acrylic or watercolor, you could mix the two together and see if you add white or more blue or more brown, because typically, you don't get a specific color every time. You could use the whole white paint tube and get a grayish brown, or add red and get a purple- brown color, it just varies from there, I really think the question should be, "What wouldn't the colors brown and blue make in paint." Because there are various shades.
Red or burgundy!
Off white or brown would be a good color to go with orange and tan paint. Anything nuetral or earth toned.
Brown, there was NO paint!
you get the color brown
Yes, you can because brown primer isn't that dark of a color.
Brown
No, you will ,however, go blind from the toxins in the paint.
White maybe?
OSHA is concerned with employee safety, not with the color of paint being applied. So, no, OSHA does not have a brown paint specification.
If you add red to green, you get brown.
It is not possible to make the color brown turn black. Brown is a combination of red, green, and blue hues, while black is the absence of color. Mixing more black paint into brown paint will only darken the shade of brown, not turn it black.
White with another color, usually black or brown