![]() Purple: Purple are made by mixing one part Cobalt Blue to an equal part of Cadmium Red.From your original primary colors, this mix is one part Cobalt Blue to two parts of Zinc Yellow. Dark Leaf Green: Mixing a second amount of yellow to the dark green will produce a dark leaf green.To be useful for making plant leaves or vegetables, it will need more yellow added to it. The dark green shown in the center of the photo comes from mixing the equal amounts of blue and yellow shown to one side of it. Dark Green: Dark green is the secondary color that comes from equal amounts of Cobalt Blue and Zinc Yellow.To make an orange peel color, you need to add a further equal amount of orange (one part red to three parts yellow). Obvious Orange: A far more obviously orange shade occurs when you mix two equal amounts of yellow with one amount of red.This is a very dark orange in fact, in some lights, it looks red (until you try to mix it with blue and get brown instead of purple!) A pure secondary orange looks more like a shade of red than orange if you are planning on using it for miniatures. The first blend shows the true secondary orange mixed from equal amounts of Cadmium Red and Zinc Yellow. Basic Orange: The top line of blends in the photo shows shades of orange.From the basic primaries, this means you need 1 part blue, two parts red, and six parts of yellow to make an ochre. Ochre brown is mixed by adding two parts of yellow to the caramel brown color. If properly blended, it can be used to mimic naturally tanned leather for some applications. Ochre Brown: Ochre Brown is a very useful color for miniatures and models, as it can be used for shading baked goods and making browned crusts.From basic primaries, this would be one part blue, two parts red, and four parts yellow. Caramel Toffee: If you mix yet another equal part of yellow to the milk chocolate brown, you will get a deep rich caramel color.From the basic primaries, this is equivalent to one part blue, two parts red, and three parts yellow. Milk Chocolate Brown: Mix in another part of yellow to the chocolate brown.To mix it from the primaries, and not from the basic dark brown, use one part blue, two parts red, and two parts yellow. ![]() Chocolate Brown: Mix one part of the bittersweet brown with one part of zinc yellow to make the color that's often associated with rich chocolate.If you want to make bittersweet chocolate brown directly, mix two parts of red, with one part of yellow, and one part of blue. Bittersweet Chocolate Brown: To mix a bittersweet chocolate colored brown that is useful for dark chocolate in baking or for tiny chocolates, mix one part of primary cadmium red with one part of the basic dark brown made from equal amounts of all three primaries.This will create the dark brown that is a useful color, but is too dark for many miniatures. Basic Dark Brown Mix equal amounts of Cadmium Red, Cobalt Blue, and Zinc Yellow together.
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