Combining Yellow & Blue Pigments: What Color Results?

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Combining yellow and blue pigments typically results in green, as yellow and cyan (light blue) are the primary colors used in printing. The confusion arises from the distinction between traditional primary colors and those used in color theory for pigments. While yellow pigment absorbs all wavelengths except yellow, the mixing of pigments reflects specific colors rather than absorbing them entirely. The discussion highlights the ambiguity in color definitions and the importance of context in understanding color mixing. Clarity in terminology is essential for accurate color representation in various applications.
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Homework Statement


What color results when yellow and blue pigment are combined?

Homework Equations


W=R+B+G
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRU9pcX4QrtrUuQpliWuX2k7BuwOCVumwfi5t4hTN7SjcXLDSP9P78XqV3F.jpg

[URL]http://www.horrorseek.com/home/halloween/wolfstone/Lighting/colmix_Additive.gif[/URL]

The Attempt at a Solution


Since yellow pigment absorbs all wavelengths except yellow, then adding another pigment will absorb all the blue pigments so shouldn't the resulting color be black?

Or if the pigments mean that it reflects yellow and blue, then I think the resulting color would be white.

However, the answer key says green. I don't understand why...there is no solution either.
 

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Hi JSGandora! :smile:

You appear to have landed in the murky area what exactly is which color.

When you are talking about pigments, the primary colors are usually named "yellow", "red" and "blue", which is what we learned in primary school.
However, in the world of printing these colors are actually closer to "yellow", "magenta" and "cyan".

So I suspect that when you were asked to combine yellow and blue, you were really asked to combine yellow and cyan (which is sort of light blue).
In that case the resulting color would indeed be green.
 
Hm, that's quite ambiguous, considering that on a Science Olympiad Optics test. Thanks for the help! :)
 
Agreed! :smile:
 
JSGandora said:
Hm, that's quite ambiguous, considering that on a Science Olympiad Optics test. Thanks for the help! :)

Yep ... I've often been startled to find how frequent it is that folks do not realize how ambiguously defined such color issue sometimes are.
 
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