WHICH ARE THE PRIMARY COLORS?
The accepted theory of color has at last found a disbeliever, and from having been considered an immutablo fact it is now believed to be an unsound conclusion to hold that the thveo primary;colors are red, yellow, and blue. . The late Professor' Maxwell has, we are told, proved beyond question that the essential primaries are red, green, • and violet, so that a good many essays and elaborate works, as well as more numerous volumes of •advice to painters, must be wrong from the very beginning, and our experienced wMowdressorsmustbelieve iigreiit part Bfjfthis scientific treatment of color to Wnneous. The admission of green into the notable trio is thus accounted for:—"The difficulties which stood in the way of an accurate determination of the primaries were largly due to an element of confusion introduced by the use of pigments for the sake of experiment, People who were accustomed to mix bine and vellow paint to produce green found it difficult to believe that the green of the spectrum was anything more than a mixture of the blue and yellow by which it was bordered; but-an admixture of the blue and yellow of the spectrum does not produce green, but white. The blue light being a compound of green with violet, and the yellow light being a compound of green with, red, the two together afford the three primaries which combine to form white. In tho paints, on the contrary, the material which appears blue, absorbs and quenches red, while the material which appears yellow, absorbs and quenches violet; so that • only tho green, which is common to both, is reflected unchanged to the spectator from the mixture,—Pottery Gazette. ' . .',',. ;."•'
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 6, Issue 1620, 27 February 1884, Page 3
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281WHICH ARE THE PRIMARY COLORS? Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume 6, Issue 1620, 27 February 1884, Page 3
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