Thank you, Gee! I'm going to watch this a hundred times until it is burned into my skull! 😂 Color Theory is one of my biggest hurdles in paint pouring. I love all of your videos, you really explain things well while also keeping it simple! Thank you so much!
Great video. The trouble I have is if I choose a colour sometimes it's obvious what other colour it is leaning towards but not always so. For instance I just bought some Prussian blue today and it looks more green than purple to my eye, so that's easy but I have bought blues before that just look primary blue. Would mixing it with some white make it more obvious which bias it is? Or is there a list somewhere that tells you?
In my experience primary blue often leans towards cyan - exactly the opposite of red in my preferred color wheel. You can definitely use white especially as a way to brighten up a color that sets darker than you want.
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Thank you, Gee! I'm going to watch this a hundred times until it is burned into my skull! 😂 Color Theory is one of my biggest hurdles in paint pouring. I love all of your videos, you really explain things well while also keeping it simple! Thank you so much!
Thank you so much Stephanie😊 I really appreciate you saying that! I always try my best to keep it short and simple!
The Pthalo Blue and Neon Pink is crazy!
The cool colors are what all the cool kids use 😁
Exactly😂
thank you for the inspiration. I don't usually do comments, if liking and leaving comments helps you...
gratitude
I appreciate you my friend 😊
Thank you Gee! You simplified it for me!
No problem Cyndy! Hope you found it useful 😊
This is awesome thank you!!
Like your way
Thank you so much I never knew that
happy to help! :D
Great video. The trouble I have is if I choose a colour sometimes it's obvious what other colour it is leaning towards but not always so. For instance I just bought some Prussian blue today and it looks more green than purple to my eye, so that's easy but I have bought blues before that just look primary blue. Would mixing it with some white make it more obvious which bias it is? Or is there a list somewhere that tells you?
In my experience primary blue often leans towards cyan - exactly the opposite of red in my preferred color wheel. You can definitely use white especially as a way to brighten up a color that sets darker than you want.