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MIXING LIGHT |
"ADDITIVE" COLOR MIXING:
THE PRIMARY COLORS OF LIGHT
Light has its own set of primary colors for mixing. These are the "additive" primary colors.
The primary colors of light are red, green and blue. They should not be confused with the three primary colors used for paints, inks, dyes and other colorants. The primary colors for light combine in a different way.
Mixing color light is called additive color
mixing, because adding light from two or more sources produces the mixed color.
The illumination from two
or more colored light sources when added together will give more
illumination than any of the lights by themselves.
This can be seen where the color illumination overlaps. The yellow formed when red light overlaps green light will be brighter than either the red light or green light alone.
When
the right amounts of red, green and blue light come together, the result appears
as "white" light.
One of the most common uses of mixing the primary colors of light is for LCD and CRT television and computer monitor screens.
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| These types of screens are made up of rows and rows of either tiny red, green and blue dots or stripes. From normal viewing distances, the stripes or dots that make up a screen image appear to blend together so we do not notice them. Since they blend together in this way, they act just as if they are mixing together. | |
The
changing intensity of each dot or stripe segment allows for all the
colors and shades of a computer image or a movie to be displayed on the viewing
screen. But if we were to view a screen image with a magnifying
glass, we would see the rapidly changing elements of red, green and blue
that make up the picture. |
There is a relationship between the three primary colors of light and the three primary colors of paints, inks, dyes and other colorants.
ANY TWO ADDITIVE PRIMARY COLORS MIX TO MAKE ONE OF THE SUBTRACTIVE PRIMARY COLORS
| Additive Primary | + | Additive Primary | = | Subtractive Primary |
| GREEN | + | BLUE | = | CYAN |
| RED | + | GREEN | = | YELLOW |
| BLUE | + | RED | = | MAGENTA |
For more about the "subtractive" primary colors, select the topic "Mixing Dyes - Paints - Inks" from the links on the left of this page.
| All images are original graphics or photography
by Robert Truscio © 1997- 2009 (All rights reserved) |