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Primary Colour Mixing Chart

Understanding how colours combine is fundamental to painting, illustration and design. This reference covers both subtractive mixing (pigments, paints, inks) and additive mixing (light, screens, projectors), along with complementary pairs and temperature relationships.

Subtractive Mixing (Pigment & Paint)

When you mix paints or pigments, you are using subtractive colour mixing. The primaries are red, yellow and blue (traditional) or cyan, magenta and yellow (CMY, used in printing). Mixing two primaries produces a secondary colour.

Colour AColour BResultNotes
RedYellowOrangeWarm secondary; more red = red-orange
RedBluePurple / VioletUse cool red for cleaner purples
BlueYellowGreenUse cool yellow for vivid greens
RedGreenBrown / GreyComplementary pair — neutralises
BlueOrangeBrown / GreyComplementary pair — neutralises
YellowPurpleBrown / GreyComplementary pair — neutralises
RedWhitePinkTint — lightens without changing hue
BlueWhiteLight blueSmall amounts of white go a long way
Any colourBlackShade (darker)Add black sparingly; can deaden colour
Red + Yellow + BlueDark brown / blackAll three primaries mixed together

Additive Mixing (Light & Screens)

Screens, projectors and stage lighting use additive mixing with primaries red, green and blue (RGB). Mixing two produces a secondary; mixing all three produces white light.

Light ALight BResultNotes
RedGreenYellowOpposite of pigment mixing
RedBlueMagentaNot the same as pigment purple
GreenBlueCyanA bright blue-green
Red + Green + BlueWhiteAll three at full intensity

Complementary Colour Pairs

Complementary colours sit opposite each other on the colour wheel. Placed side by side they create maximum contrast; mixed together they neutralise to grey or brown. These are essential for creating vibrant shadows and dynamic compositions.

ColourComplementEffect when paired
RedGreenHigh energy; Christmas palette
BlueOrangeMost popular complement pair in film and photography
YellowPurpleRegal, luxurious feel
Red-orangeBlue-greenTropical, vibrant contrast
Yellow-greenRed-purpleNatural, garden-inspired contrast
Yellow-orangeBlue-purpleSunset palette; warm/cool tension

Warm vs Cool Primaries

Every primary colour has warm and cool variants. Using the right temperature primary is key to mixing clean, vibrant secondaries. A split-primary palette (six colours: warm and cool of each primary) gives you the widest possible range.

PrimaryWarm versionCool versionBest mix result
RedCadmium Red (leans orange)Alizarin Crimson (leans purple)Warm red + yellow = bright orange; cool red + blue = clean purple
YellowCadmium Yellow (leans orange)Lemon Yellow (leans green)Warm yellow + red = orange; cool yellow + blue = vivid green
BlueUltramarine Blue (leans purple)Cerulean / Phthalo Blue (leans green)Warm blue + cool red = purple; cool blue + cool yellow = green

Try the Colour Mixing Calculator

Use our interactive tool to experiment with colour mixing ratios and see predicted results:

Colour mixing results vary depending on pigment quality, brand, medium and surface. This chart provides general guidance — always test mixes on a scrap surface before applying to your work.