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Craigh00000
Mar25-07, 10:17 PM
I have a good friend that I like to debate with. We spent about three hours discussing this one.

What are the three primary colors?

I said Red, Yellow, and Blue.

He said Red, Blue and Green.

We were both correct.

Why?
o:) :biggrin:

mattmns
Mar25-07, 10:40 PM
Red, Yellow, Blue are subtractive primaries.

Red, Blue, Green are additive primaries.

If that is the answer, then I am not sure how it is a brain teaser.

Craigh00000
Mar25-07, 10:42 PM
There are quite a few questions here that are not technically "Brain Teasers." I figure if you have to think about the question, and the answer is not common knowledge, then it is a brain teaser. But hey, I just got here. So if I'm screwin with the rules, let me know.



:Swimming with Angels::

mattmns
Mar25-07, 10:48 PM
I don't know the rules either, I just thought brain teasers are something that can be figured out (logically) if you think about it, and this was more of either you know it or you don't. Either way, I don't see any harm in posting it.

jim.nastics
Mar28-07, 08:41 PM
A third set, what about cyan, yellow, and magenta?

chaoseverlasting
Mar29-07, 01:25 PM
How would you define primary colors? This is something like vectors. Using a combination of any three non coplanar vectors, you can define any vector in a particular 3D space.

In the same way, using a combination of any three different colors you could get all other colors I guess. In different quantities. Although one would have to be white, and of the other two, one dark and one light.

Craigh00000
Apr9-07, 12:27 PM
Actually, I was thinking about the primary colors for art/additive as Red, Yellow and Blue

And the primary colors for video productio/subtractive as Red, Blue and Green.

:rolleyes: