There are three primary classes of color: primary colors, secondary colors, and tertiary colors. Primary colors are red, blue, and yellow, while secondary colors are created by mixing primary colors (e.g. green, orange, purple). Tertiary colors are created by mixing a primary color with a secondary color (e.g. red-orange).
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The opposite of the colour purple on a colour wheel is yellow. To figure this out you need to understand the concept of primary and secondary colours. If the colour you have is a primary colour (one of red, yellow or blue) then the opposite colour is the secondary colour resultant from mixing the two remaining primary colours. If the colour you have is a secondary (purple, green or orange) then the opposite colour is the primary not involved in the making of the secondary colour.
Purple is not a primary color. It is a secondary color made by mixing red and blue.
Each secondary colour is situated opposite the one colour not used in its creation. Therefore the opposite colour to green on the colour wheel is red.
"Opaque" and "transparent" refer to the amount of light that passes through the colour, not the colour itself. "Opaque" is a term used to describe any solid colour that light does not pass through. If you put an opaque colour it over another colour you will not see the colour below through it. "Transparent" is a term used to describe any colour that light passes through in any of many varying degrees. If you paint a transparent colour over another colour, you will be able, to some degree, to see the colour(s) and the ground (paper, canvas, whatever you are painting on) through the top coat.
Platinum is greyish white in colour See related link for a picture and more about platinum. the above is true but it has been known to be bluey colour as well but mainl and whity/grey colour