As an exercise in my color theory class, we overlaid letters on top of each other, and then colored them using the rules of additive light (rgb). I liked the way mine turned out so im posting it ^^”
I used N64 for my letters

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As an exercise in my color theory class, we overlaid letters on top of each other, and then colored them using the rules of additive light (rgb). I liked the way mine turned out so im posting it ^^”
I used N64 for my letters
Here are all three color wheels side by side. Notice the colors are more or less the same. The primary colors and the way they combine are different.
This is the additive color wheel. The bigger blocks are the primary colors. The medium sized blocks between them are the secondary colors achieved by mixing LIGHT with the primary colors.
RED + BLUE = MAGENTA GREEN + BLUE = CYAN RED + GREEN = YELLOW
The additive system is used most often in theatrical lighting (theatre plays, music concerts, circus shows, night clubs, etc.). A red spotlight and a blue spotlight are aimed at a performer on a stage, and where the spotlights overlap a magenta color is produced. This is additive color mixing. The red light is adding its wavelengths to the blue light, and a third color, magenta, is the result.
The base colors in the additive system are RED, GREEN, and BLUE.
The additive system of color involves the mixing of colored light. Colored light is mixed by taking a light of one color and a light of another color and beaming them onto a common surface.
Where the two colors of light overlap or mix, a third color is produced. Red and Green make Yellow. Red and Blue make Magenta. Green and Blue make Cyan. All colors together make White.
There are two basic systems for organizing and mixing color: additive and subtractive. Although these two systems share terms and certain characteristics, each must be considered separately.
Film Photography Podcast – Episode 192 - July 15, 2018 Topics: Minolta Hi-Matic G, What is Panchromatic Film, Additive Color, Listener letters and More! DO
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