There are two main reasons. The first is that the shape of the seeds will determine their colour. The other is the presence of different types of chlorophylls in each seed, according to their stage of development, which can be detected by testing them under a microscope.
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No. Green is a secondary colour because you can create it by mixing other parts of the spectrum. The primary colours are Red, Yellow, and Blue. You can mix yellow and blue to make green.
Purple! Have a close look at the colour wheel. Let me explain what the colour wheel is. The colour wheel is all about the Primary Colours (colours you cannot make with other colours). The Primary Colours are Blue, Yellow and Red. Blue + Red = Purple Red + Yellow = Orange Yellow + Blue = Green Purple, Orange and Green are known as Secondary Colours. There are also colours that compliment each other in the colour wheel. If you have a look at a colour wheel and choose a colour, then see what colour is OPPOSITE the colour you chose, you find it's Complimentary Colour!
if you want a solid colour, green or red will do.
Every colour ------ I agree, but one specific color that would look nice is purple, because it ties green, blue, and red together nicely.
Since brown is considered a neutral, there is no true compliment. Brown is made by mixing red, orange, or yellow pigment with either black or their respective complimentary colors. Therefore, taking into account the original base colors, and their respective compliments (red w/green, orange w/blue, yellow w/violet) we see that the common shade in the compliments are blue. Therefore, the practical (though not precise) compliment of brown would be blue.