a) Purple
b) Green
c) Orange
These are secondary colors
Tertiary colors are vermillion (red-orange), Chartreuse (yellow-green), Indigo (purple-blue), Violet (red-purple), Aqua (blue-green) and Ochre (yellow-orange).
The primary (first) colours are the basic building blocks. You use them to make other colours but can not mix other colours to get them. The primary colours are: Red Blue Yellow. The secondary (second) colours are the result of mixing two of the primary colours in equal parts to achieve a colour. The secondary colours are: Purple - 1 part Red + 1 part Blue Orange - 1part Red + 1 part Yellow Green - 1 part Blue + 1 part Yellow The tertiary (third) colours are the result of adding one part primary colour to the secondary colours it is part of, resulting in colours closer to the primaries than the secondaries. The tertiary colours are: Red-Purple - 2 parts Red + 1 part Blue Blue-Purple - 2 parts Blue + 1 part Red Blue-Green - 2 parts Blue + 1 part Yellow Yellow-Green - 2 parts Yellow + 1 part Blue Yellow-Orange - 2 parts Yellow + 1 part Red Red-Orange - 2 parts Red + 1 part Yellow.
When you mix primary colors (red, blue, yellow) with secondary colors (orange, green, purple), you create tertiary colors. Tertiary colors are a combination of a primary color and a secondary color, resulting in a wide range of hues.
The tertiary colours are:Blue-GreenYellow-GreenYellow-OrangeRed-OrangeRed-VioletBlue-Violet
Tertiary colors are created by mixing a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel. For example, mixing equal parts of red (a primary color) and orange (a secondary color made by mixing red and yellow) creates the tertiary color red-orange.
Tertiary colours are the six colours on a colour wheel between a primary colour and a secondary colour. They are: Yellow-orange, red-orange, red-purple, blue-purple, blue-green, and yellow green. To make any tertiary colour add one part of a secondary colour (green, purple or orange) and one part of one of the two primary colours that make it. For example, to make red-orange add one part red to one part orange.
tertiary colours is when you mix primary colours with secondary colours. ( third stage of colours )
to get a tertiary colour you have to mix 2 primary colours. primary colours are red, blue and yellow.
Tertiary Colours
a colour formed by mixing two secondary colours
The primary (first) colours are the basic building blocks. You use them to make other colours but can not mix other colours to get them. The primary colours are: Red Blue Yellow. The secondary (second) colours are the result of mixing two of the primary colours in equal parts to achieve a colour. The secondary colours are: Purple - 1 part Red + 1 part Blue Orange - 1part Red + 1 part Yellow Green - 1 part Blue + 1 part Yellow The tertiary (third) colours are the result of adding one part primary colour to the secondary colours it is part of, resulting in colours closer to the primaries than the secondaries. The tertiary colours are: Red-Purple - 2 parts Red + 1 part Blue Blue-Purple - 2 parts Blue + 1 part Red Blue-Green - 2 parts Blue + 1 part Yellow Yellow-Green - 2 parts Yellow + 1 part Blue Yellow-Orange - 2 parts Yellow + 1 part Red Red-Orange - 2 parts Red + 1 part Yellow.
Red is a primary colour and although it is one of the colours used to create secondary and tertiary colours and shades it is not possible to mix other colours to achieve a true red.
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)
Primary colours. Orange, purple and green are the three secondary colours. Any combination of those and/or primary colours after that are tertiary colours.I.E.red + yellow = orangered + blue = purpleblue + yellow = green
Primary: Red, Yellow, Blue. Secondary - the colours you get when blending the primary: Orange, Green, Purple. Tertiary - the colours you get when blending secondary (E.g.): Peach, Mint, Mauve.
Primary: Red, Yellow, Blue. Secondary - the colours you get when blending the primary: Orange, Green, Purple. Tertiary - the colours you get when blending secondary (E.g.): Peach, Mint, Mauve.
Primary: Red, Yellow, Blue. Secondary - the colours you get when blending the primary: Orange, Green, Purple. Tertiary - the colours you get when blending secondary (E.g.): Peach, Mint, Mauve.
Red is a primary colour. It is one of the building blocks of colour. This means you can mix other primary colours (blue & yellow) to it to achieve secondary and tertiary colours, but you can not mix other colours to achieve red.