VintijDroidGutzz
Super Freak
What happens when you add blue?
It's like when you add more cowbell.
What happens when you add blue?
All of my old t-shirts that once were black, now are brown.
Brown is generally a combination of red & black - to varying degrees, plus white for tonal variation.
I'm sure it has others added for specific colours, but red & black is the main starting point.
Funny thing is you can actually create RGB from CYMIf you guys are talking about PIGMENT/painting, then ya, green is a combination of blue and yellow. Add red and you have brown.
If you're talking about light and process color printing, then no. Then red, blue and yellow are not the primaries. But everyone knows that already anyway, right? RGB (Red, Green Blue, additive) for light, CMY (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, subtractive) for light and print and RYB (Red Yellow and Blue, also subtractive) traditionally for pigments/painting. So if you're dong traditional painting, you'll be taught RYB, if you're doing old-school film/negative photography processing or any kind of modern printing, CMY. Digital photography, RGB. And of course you can't make black with additive color and you can't make white with subtractive (nor is the black "really" black either). One or the other is not a color at all, depending on the model. You can get away with treating them both as non-colors, just shades. All colors or no colors.
Try keeping these all straight in school where you have to switch to a different model multiple times in one day depending on whether you're painting, printing (including color photos in the dark room), or using a computer, on which I've been drawing/painting since the early 80's.
blah blah blah blue
blah blah blah brown........
i'm going to get my lawyer to straiten this out
Bob Loblaw
blah blah blah blue
blah blah blah brown........
i'm going to get my lawyer to straiten this out
Bob Loblaw