Blue Violet is the correct answer
The color midway between blue and violet is indigo (indigo blue, the I in "Roy G Biv").
In the outer ring are the tertiary colors - achieved by mixing varying amounts of one primary color with the adjacent primary. Mix a large amount of red with a small amount of blue and you will get a red-violet color. ... ANTIQUE GOLD Add just an extremely small touch of; Leaf Green to golden yellow.
The color violet is also called purple. It lies beyond the color blue in the spectrum.
blue
Although there is no standard color wheel, any color wheel containing tertiary colors would include red-violet (though it may be named something else).
Blue-Violet (Tertiary color)
The tertiary colors in the color wheel are created by mixing a primary color with an adjacent secondary color. They include vermilion (red-orange), amber (yellow-orange), chartreuse (yellow-green), teal (blue-green), violet (blue-purple), and magenta (red-purple).
Purple is a secondary color made up of equal parts red and blue. Blue is a primary color. Mixing purple & blue would result in the tertiary color blue-purple.
The third category of colors on the color wheel is tertiary colors. These colors are made by mixing equal parts of a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel. Tertiary colors include red-orange, yellow-orange, yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and red-violet.
The following colours are defined on a standard 12 colour wheel: - Red (primary) - - - Red-Biolet (tertiary) - - Violet (secondary) - - - Violet-Blue (tertiary) - Blue (primary) - - - Blue-Green (tertiary) - - Green (secondary) - - - Green-Yellow (tertiary) - Yellow (primary) - - - Yellow-Orange (tertiary) - - Orange (secondary) - - - Orange-Red (tertiary)
Tertiary colors are created by mixing a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel. Examples of tertiary colors include red-orange, yellow-green, and blue-violet.
The tertiary colors are created by mixing two secondary colors together. Tertiary colors are not the same as intermediates because intermediates are created by mixing one primary color with a secondary. Sometimes the intermediates are referred to as tertiary colors, BUT remember it isn't the other way around.Examples of Tertiary colors:- Orange + purple = russet- Orange + green =citron- Purple + green = olive(These aren't all of the tertiary colors)A way that you can tell intermediate and tertiary colors a part is that true tertiary colors have names of their own. Intermediate colors have names with their primary and secondary colors in them (i.e. Red-Violet, Blue-Violet, Red-Orange, Yellow-Orange, Blue-Green, Yellow-Green)
a tertiary color is made from one primary and one secondary color Primary colors red, yellow, blue Secondary colors orange, green, purple Tertiary colors red orange, yellow orange, blue green, blue violet, yellow green, etc
Tertiary colors are created by mixing equal parts of a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel. These colors include red-orange, yellow-orange, yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and red-violet. They are situated between primary and secondary colors on the color wheel.
Tertiary colors are a color group that is created by mixing a primary color with a secondary color. Examples of tertiary colors include yellow-green, blue-green, red-violet, and so on.
Primary; Red blue yellow secondry; orange green purple Tertiary; yellow-orange, red-orange, red-violet, blue violet, blue-green, and yellow-green. hope this helps!
Red is a primary color. Violet is a secondary color resultant from mixing equal parts Red and Blue. If you combine the two you will get the tertiary color Red-purple (or Red-violet).