What are the secondary colors?
secondary colors are colors created by a combination of two primary colors together. The exact nature of the primary and secondary colors depends on what color system is used, especially with regard to whether the colors used are light, pigment or color. Each of these systems has different secondary, due to different primary colors. Regardless of the differences between different forms of color, secondary colors are always created in the same way - a combination of two primary colors.
When discussing colors, whether primary or secondary, it is important to create the medium in which the color is used. In principle, the color can be defined in two ways: additive color systems and subtractive color systems. Additive colors are essentially colored forms of light in which combining or adding together different colors of lights create new colors. Subtractive systems refer to a pigment or color in which the color is created by absorption or deducting, a certain wavelength of light and reflecting additional wavelengths,that create the appearance of certain colors.
In an additive system, such as color light from the monitor or projector, there are three primary colors of red, blue and green. Three secondary colors are purple, yellow and cyan, which are a combination of each: purple of red and blue, yellow of red and green and azulka made of blue and green. When all three primary light colors are combined together, they create white light.
Subtractive Systems have different secondary colors depending on the type of system used. The pigment, which is usually used to print images, has three primary colors of azure, purple and yellow. Secondary colors for pigment are then blue, from azure and purple; red, purple and yellow; And green, from azulka and yellow. Because these pigments are combined, they create a darker color, while combining light creates a lighter color; A combination of all three primary suIt creates a black or muddy brownish gray. It is worth noting that pigment and light have the opposite secondary and primary colors.
Three secondary colors often taught and discussed in art classrooms are colors based on color, which is also a subtraction system. The color uses red, blue and yellow as three primary colors and orange, purple and green. When combined, red and yellow make orange and blue, create purple or purple and blue and yellow create green. There are also tertiary colors that can be created by combining secondary and primary colors, although rarely used.