Primaries, Secondaries, and Tertiary Colors

Light that has roughly equal amounts of all visible wavelengths appears white, thus white represents the presence of all visible colors. Black is the absence of color. When light bounces off an object the color we see is a combination of all of the refracted and reflected colors. The object absorbs some colors and we see the rest. Thus if an object absorbs blue only, it will appear yellow to us because it is reflecting and refracting all of the other colors which add to make yellow.

figure 1
Color Wheel of Light, Additive Colors
figure 2
Color Wheel of Pigments, Subtractive Colors
figure 3
Traditional Pigment Color Wheel

The primary colors of light are any set of three colors, that when added make white light and can be mixed to make any other colors. The most commonly used primary additive colors are red, green, and blue (figure 1). The primary colors of light are called additive because you add colors to mix and make other colors. The more colors you mix in, the closer you get to white. A primary mixed with an opposite secondary will tend towards white in an additive system.

The primary colors of pigments are called subtractive, because when you mix them, more color is taken away and you get closer to black (figures 2 and 3). In other words, everytime light hits something that has a dye in it, that dye takes away (subtracts) color from the light and what you see is what is left over. Secondary colors are made by mixing any two primaries. Tertiary colors are made by mixing a primary and adjacent secondary color. A primary mixed with an opposite secondary will tend towards black in a subtractive system.

Since pigments are the opposite of light in the sense that, pigments are made by absorbing some wavelengths of light and thus subtracting color from light, then it makes sense that the primary colors of pigments should be the opposite of the primary colors of light (figure 2). Indeed this is the case. Look at any standard color inkjet cartridge and you will find that it uses cyan, magenta, and yellow to make all the colors that you print. Black is also added to make darker colors with less ink, however those darker colors could be made by just mixing the proper amounts of the primaries. Notice that these are the colors that are exactly opposite of the primary colors of light on the color wheel (figure 1). That is why the colors in figure 2 are the same as the colors in figure 1, but in opposite positions. Figure 3, shows what is considered the traditional primary subtractive colors, which may indeed be another set of primaries, however since they are already so dark, white would need to be added to some of them to get lighter colors. In pigment, white is considered the absense of color so adding some white just makes the color less intense.

In an additive system, any two colors that produce white when added together are called complementary. Thus on the color wheel, the complementary colors are those that are opposite of each other, since if one of them is a primary, the other is a secondary and is already a mixture of the other two primary colors. If you are dealing with a tertiary color, then two opposite tertiaries are already mixtures of opposite primaries and secondaries, so they will add to white as well. If you are dealing with a subtractive wheel, then the opposite colors will mix to make black since together they will remove all of the visible wavelengths. Play with the animation below to get a better understanding of this.


Click here for a larger version.

Reference:
Optices by Eugene Hecht, 2nd ed, Addison Wesley, 1987, pages 114-118