Lavender is a pastel purple (1 part purple + 1 part purple).
Purple is a secondary colour (1 part red + 1 part blue)
Red is a primary colour.
So if you mix this all together you will get:
1 part red + 1 part white + 1/2 part red + 1/2 part blue = a pastel of the tertiary colour red-purple or a pinky lavender.
Since green is a secondary color, mixing it with any color would make a tertiary color. But red and green are complimentary colors and therefore would make a brown-black color. So blue, green and red mixed together would make and ugly brown color that's tinted with blue.
Violet is its own color in the color spectrum. However, if you want to go about mixing it with paints - you'll need red and blue mixed together.
The color remain red because vinegar is an acidic solution.
Brown
yellow.
Mixing lavender (a shade of purple) with red would likely result in a slightly muted or toned-down shade of red, possibly with a hint of purple undertones. The exact resulting color would depend on the specific shades and proportions of lavender and red being mixed.
Light blue and pink will typically create a lavender or pastel purple color when mixed together.
A combination of blue and red in a lighter shade typically produces lavender. The specific proportions of each color can be adjusted to achieve variations in the shade of lavender.
Green and red make the color brown when mixed together.
Mixing red with yellow will create the color orange.
Lavender is considered to be a light shade of purple. But lavender is actually also red and blue mixed together or maybe purple mixed with white. It can be considered a shade of blue too.
Red and yellow mixed together make the color orange.
lavender
Green and red make brown when mixed together.
Red and yellow make shades of orange when mixed. They are perfect orange when mixed in even amounts. The more red is in the color the darker the color will be.
Yellow and orange mixed together make the color red.
Red and yellow mixed together make the color orange.