Рубрики

paint

Colours to mix to get brown

Burnt Sienna: Burnt Sienna reminds me of pure maple syrup. It’s such a beautiful warm brown color and I love using it as an underpainting for orange fur, or orange leaves on a tree.


What Colors Make Brown? How to Mix Browns

How to mix brown

The Virtual Instructor Logo

In an effort to make brown, new painters sometimes just mix a little of everything together and hope for the best. Hoping for the best is not a good plan, even if you get lucky sometimes. Mixing a range of browns does not have to be a mysterious shot in the dark, however. There are several benefits to learning to mix neutral colors (both browns and grays).

  1. Less waste. Without a methodical approach to mixing neutral colors some mixture are sure to miss there mark. Unused colors are a wast of money, time and effort.
  2. Simplify the palette. Working with a smaller set of colors on the palette makes remixing colors simpler. It also imparts harmony among all the colors in a work of art. There is nothing wrong with purchasing a tube of paint brown paint. This author uses Raw Umber from time to time. Still yet, there is something quite right about developing the skills to mix specific browns.
  3. Become a better artist. Besides neutrals, the world is full of other dull colors. Being able to purposefully create colors of varying intensity is a required skill for representational artists. Those that are able to mix a range of browns can use the same approach to dull down other colors. Dull colors are important because they help the brighter ones to stand out in a work of art.

How to Mix Brown – The Short Answer

The three primary colors (red, yellow, blue), when mixed, make brown. It is the ratio, as well as the specific pigments used, that determine the specific neutral color these hues will make.

Primary colors mixed to make brown


The Long Answer to Mixing Brown

The complete answer to mixing brown is complex and touches on several color theory concepts. Before diving into the rabbit hole that is color theory, let’s review a few terms…

VOCABULARY

  1. Primary colors are colors that can’t be mixed from any other colors. They are the reds, yellows, and blues.
  2. Secondary colors are the colors made by mixing pairs of primary hues. Oranges, greens, and purples are the secondary colors.
    • Red and yellow make orange.
    • Yellow and blue make green.
    • Blue and red make purple.
  3. Complementary colors are pairs of colors across from each other on the colors wheel. Just as black and white are opposite values, complementary pairs are opposite colors. Side by side, complementary colors help each other to stand out and appear more intense. Conversely, when mixed, they are like positive and negative numbers, canceling each other out. They reduce the brightness (intensity) of one another. So, besides combining to make brown, complementary colors help the artist control intensity.

Color mixing as an equation

A variety of browns are made by mixing the different complementary pairs together. So, what are the complementary pairs:

  1. Blue and orange are the colors of the sky (blue sky and orange sunsets).
  2. Yellow are purple are the colors of royalty (kings wear gold crowns and purple robes).
  3. Red and green are the color of roses, strawberries, holly, tomatoes and yes, Christmas.

It is worth noting that the intermediate colors (also called tertiary) form three additional complementary pairs: red-orange/blue-green, yellow-orange/blue-violet and yellow-green/red-violet.

Think of brown as mixture of primaries and/or a combination of complements – two sides of the same coin. Since a secondary color is a combination of two primaries, and the complement to any secondary color is the primary color not used to make that secondary, then combining complementary colors is the same as mixing a third primary into the first two primaries.

The image below illustrates what happens when the three main complementary pairs are mixed together.

Mixing complementary colors to make brown

Notice that the complementary pairs above do not make the same brown. This is because the green, orange, and purple were not mixed from the same set of primaries.

See also: Color Theory

Using Warm and Cool Primary Colors

The palette below shows a set of primary colors only. Note that there are two reds and two blues – a warmer and cooler version of each hue.

Warm and cool primary colors

A cool red mixed with a warm blue make a brilliant purple. Here, Alizarin Crimson is the cooler red while Ultramarine Blue is the warmer blue. Color temperature is relative. Though blue is a cool color, within the family of blue hues, there are warm and cool variances.

The Acrylic Painting Academy
“The Acrylic Painting Academy” is a comprehensive painting course designed to guide absolute beginners to a level of producing professional quality acrylic paintings.

VIEW COURSE

Using both warm and cool primary colors allows the artist to mix the broadest variety of colors, including neutrals like brown and gray.

Below are the pigment combinations used to create the secondary colors above.

Pigment combinations used to mix secondary colors

Color Theory Bonus Knowledge

Brown and gray are close cousins. Just as brown can be thought of as the three primaries mixed together, so too, can gray. The color pencil illustration below demonstrates how a greater amount of blue in the mixture results in grey while a more equal combination of primaries makes brown.

Mixing browns and grays with colored pencils

In a perfect world, all tubes of paint would have the same, predictable mixing power and equal amounts of primary colors. When mixed, these colors would always make brown.

Unfortunately, the color mixing world is not perfect.

Depending on the grade of paint, some pigments may overpower others, requiring an adjustment to the approximate ratio used when mixing brown. This is common for “student” grade paints.


Why You Need to Know What Colors Make Brown

Friend, I’ve been there. You have a limited budget and there are so many pretty paint colors to choose from! Let’s be honest, brown is pretty low on the priority list, am I right?! Why spend your precious paint budget on brown when you can make it yourself?!

The list I am providing is by no means every single paint mix that will make brown paint but I am pretty confident that you’ll find a combo or two that you can make with paint you already have.

The Easiest Way to Make Brown Paint

Have you ever been trying to mix different paints to come up with a specific color but ended up with a pile of mud on your palette? Yeah, that’s pretty common when you’re first starting and you’re learning color theory through trial and error.

Basically, if you mix complementary paint colors, there’s a great chance you’ll end up with brown or even grey.

Complimentary colors are colors that are directly across from one another on the color wheel. So, here are some very simple complementary color combinations:

  • Purple + Yellow
  • Blue + Orange
  • Green + Red

Brown Paint Straight From the Tube

A painting of a bouquet of flowers in a pumpkin with a multi-colored brown background. Also included is a couple of tubes of brown paint

If you’re not interested in mixing paint, there are some really great choices, that come already made for you, such as:

  • Burnt Umber
  • Raw Umber
  • Burnt Sienna
  • Raw Sienna

The Siennas are lighter and lean warmer than the Umbers so both are useful in your painting kit.

Burnt Umber

Burnt Umber is a rich dark brown that leans toward red when compared to raw umber. It’s extremely useful for painting bark on trees, freshly turned earth, brown hair, and much more. Burnt Umber is pretty transparent so just be aware that it’s great to use for glazing but, unless you pack it on pretty thick, it will show anything that’s beneath it.

Raw Umber

Raw Umber is a very earthy tone of brown that leans more toward a greenish-yellow. The best way to describe it would be a very dark khaki/army camo brown. Raw Umber is semi-transparent so it will show whatever is beneath it.

Burnt Sienna

Burnt Sienna is a transparent brown that leans toward red. It’s a great color to use as an underpainting if you’re trying to create warmth in your painting.

Raw Sienna

To me, Raw Sienna is an interesting color. It’s definitely brown but it’s got a lot of yellow in it. It’s similar to yellow ochre but slightly darker and definitely more brown. Raw Sienna is more opaque than the other earthy browns, as well.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

Leave a Reply