What is your favorite color?

Red Colour of the gunners.
 
You do know that black isn't technically a color. ;) :1orglaugh

I will go with Midnight Blue myself.

If I remember correctly from my days, (and nights), doing color film and print processing, like light waves, the primary colors Red, Green and Blue make white, (like your TV), while the secondary colors cyan, magenta and yellow make black, (or grey in lesser amounts). I suppose that's the basis for somehow saying black isn't a color, as it's a neutralization of equal amounts of the secondary colors.
 
If I remember correctly from my days, (and nights), doing color film and print processing, like light waves, the primary colors Red, Green and Blue make white, (like your TV), while the secondary colors cyan, magenta and yellow make black, (or grey in lesser amounts). I suppose that's the basis for somehow saying black isn't a color, as it's a neutralization of equal amounts of the secondary colors.

a question? how do blue, red, and green make white?

also, the primary colors are blue, red, and yellow.:thumbsup:
 
You do know that black isn't technically a color. ;) :1orglaugh

I will go with Midnight Blue myself.

If I remember correctly from my days, (and nights), doing color film and print processing, like light waves, the primary colors Red, Green and Blue make white, (like your TV), while the secondary colors cyan, magenta and yellow make black, (or grey in lesser amounts). I suppose that's the basis for somehow saying black isn't a color, as it's a neutralization of equal amounts of the secondary colors.
Your right! Yellow, Cyan and Magenta in equal amounts make black! (I worked in a printshop for 13 years so I know this for a fact!:thumbsup: )
 
a question? how do blue, red, and green make white?

also, the primary colors are blue, red, and yellow.:thumbsup:

Red blue green are primary. If you look very closely at your TV screen, you'll see the 3 colors. I know it sounds impossible, but I have a picture in a book about photography, and it shows 3 beams of light, red, green and blue, striking a common point and where they do you get white. I've never tried it, but knowing what I know about hands on using secondary colors, filters and electronic scanners in photo processing, it has to be.
 
Red blue green are primary. If you look very closely at your TV screen, you'll see the 3 colors. I know it sounds impossible, but I have a picture in a book about photography, and it shows 3 beams of light, red, green and blue, striking a common point and where they do you get white. I've never tried it, but knowing what I know about hands on using secondary colors, filters and electronic scanners in photo processing, it has to be.
I hate to correct you AFA but that is the three primary colors for televison! In the "real world" it is red blue and yellow! (because if you think about it green is made up from yellow and blue):thumbsup:
 
Red blue green are primary. If you look very closely at your TV screen, you'll see the 3 colors. I know it sounds impossible, but I have a picture in a book about photography, and it shows 3 beams of light, red, green and blue, striking a common point and where they do you get white. I've never tried it, but knowing what I know about hands on using secondary colors, filters and electronic scanners in photo processing, it has to be.

thats only in tv's. those are not "primary colors". those are just tubes. in art the primary colors are red, blue, and yellow. :thumbsup:


doc, ya beat me again!!
 
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