Super tip about French Ultramarine being granulating blue -- so the greys with it are particularly interesting -- and then you gave us alternate of Phthalo blue for non-granulating. Great video, thanks!
I love mixing on paper as well, that's how you can get a lot of interesting effects. Violet is red + blue so when you add yellow, it's all the 3 primary colors mixed together, just a different way of getting there. But yes, a secondary color (which is 2 primaries) + the opposite color which is the 3rd primary should give you a gray or black.
Such an underrated and nicely done video, thank you 🙏
also your voice is really relaxing, subscribed!
You're welcome! Thank you for subscribing!
Super tip about French Ultramarine being granulating blue -- so the greys with it are particularly interesting -- and then you gave us alternate of Phthalo blue for non-granulating. Great video, thanks!
You're welcome! It took me a while to figure that out, and once I did, a lot more things made sense. Glad that helped you!
It's interesting how grays can be created from primary colors. I learned a new thing today. Thank you! 🙌
Glad it was helpful! My mind was blown when I first learned this as well.
My usual chromatic gray is with a yellow and violet to create interesting shadows - but I have those two fuse on paper and not as a pre-mix.
I love mixing on paper as well, that's how you can get a lot of interesting effects. Violet is red + blue so when you add yellow, it's all the 3 primary colors mixed together, just a different way of getting there. But yes, a secondary color (which is 2 primaries) + the opposite color which is the 3rd primary should give you a gray or black.