Correction for question #9, the Venus of Milo was presented to King Louis XVIII in 1821, not Louis XVII. Louis XVII who was the son of Louis XVI had died in the prison of "Le Temple" in Paris in 1795.
20 for 20 with allowance for #11 knowing that Additive Color is a very specific application within the Spectral Color palette. Also knowing primaries for Spectral Color (light) is red, blue, green (RBG) and Optical Color is blue (cyan), red (magenta), yellow (" ") (CMY+K - "K" being "black" as "CMY+K is the primaries as designated in desktop publishing and they incl. black. Anyway, point is I gave myself #11.😁🤩👍
Additive Primary colours are Red, Blue and Green. Subtractive Primary colours are Red, Yellow and Blue. When you add paints together you are using the Subtractive Primary colours in order for a surface to absorb colours to reflect the desired colour
The answer to No 11 is wrong. Green is a primary color in an additive set of colors, yellow isn't. See: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Additive_color Plus you might want to check the spelling of 'Van Gough'...
Coming in 3 years late - yeah. Additive Color is a *very* specific application of the primary colors on (I vaguely remember - probably wrong) a black surface with a Spectral Color palette (that is, where color is created using light.) The primary colors (or the 3 colors by which, through mixing, *all* other colors can be made) are red, blue, and green. The color system The Trivia Channel is referring to is *not* the Additive Color Set but rather an Optical Color palette. Simply put, this is physical medium of any kind. Any paint (oil, acrylic, watercolor, guache), colored pencils, crayons, pastels, you name it. The primaries in Optical Color are red, yellow, and blue. In desktop publishing they call them cyan (blue), magenta (red), yellow (" "), and black is counted. So when you are calibrating your monitor, you will have a choice of: RGB - For Spectral Color. Use this is to calibrate to the actual colored light on the LCD screen on your monitor which is your best bet *OR* If you have a printer attached with 3 color cartridges + 1 black cartridge. Then, use CMY+K - Again, that is for Optical Color, which would be the ink in your printer. That will allow you to calibrate more accurately what you see on your screen to what comes out of your printer. With some tinkering & fine tuning. *HOWEVER* RYB or RBY just allows you to calibrate to the 3 color cartridges with no consideration for the black cartridge even though the printer may use it to shade the other 3 colors. *So go either RGB or CMY+K.*
oh kyeah you got to dance with your marm i don't know this one. you have another chance to affiliate with another group if my guess is right. unless you were a bully and misunderstood the fame game
16 😁 good quiz❤️❤️
I got 16. Good quiz.
16 out of 20
20/20
18/20. Not bad.
14 correct but I'll take it -never studied the subject !
If this has been mentioned before, excuse me, but pictures would really go well with the questions.
Hi Cherie, This has not been mentioned before and I think that is really helpful feedback. Thank you :) and will take on board.
12 out of 20...Overall for me thats excellent on a subject I know little or nothing about.. Barrie - UK
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
Art Quiz
19/20
Yep I missed that one too.
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
Try this quiz. You will probably get everything right.
Ha ha wala akong alam sa arts pero mahilig akong magdrowing
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
Try this quiz
Correction for question #9, the Venus of Milo was presented to King Louis XVIII in 1821, not Louis XVII. Louis XVII who was the son of Louis XVI had died in the prison of "Le Temple" in Paris in 1795.
14/20
20 for 20 with allowance for #11 knowing that Additive Color is a very specific application within the Spectral Color palette. Also knowing primaries for Spectral Color (light) is red, blue, green (RBG) and Optical Color is blue (cyan), red (magenta), yellow (" ") (CMY+K - "K" being "black" as "CMY+K is the primaries as designated in desktop publishing and they incl. black. Anyway, point is I gave myself #11.😁🤩👍
Got 3 of them wrong.
I never studied Art. But I do love History, for many reasons.
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
Try this one. It's an art quiz.
The artist's name is 'Van Gogh' not 'Van Gough.' I studied art and I got 17.
Additive Primary colours are Red, Blue and Green. Subtractive Primary colours are Red, Yellow and Blue. When you add paints together you are using the Subtractive Primary colours in order for a surface to absorb colours to reflect the desired colour
False. You stupid.
Thanks good to know
Bruh I almost got everything wrong :(
Need to become cultured...
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
This one is a better art quiz
You probably know lots about other subjects though. Don't beat yourself up!
The answer to No 11 is wrong. Green is a primary color in an additive set of colors, yellow isn't.
See: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Additive_color
Plus you might want to check the spelling of 'Van Gough'...
Coming in 3 years late - yeah. Additive Color is a *very* specific application of the primary colors on (I vaguely remember - probably wrong) a black surface with a Spectral Color palette (that is, where color is created using light.) The primary colors (or the 3 colors by which, through mixing, *all* other colors can be made) are red, blue, and green.
The color system The Trivia Channel is referring to is *not* the Additive Color Set but rather an Optical Color palette. Simply put, this is physical medium of any kind. Any paint (oil, acrylic, watercolor, guache), colored pencils, crayons, pastels, you name it. The primaries in Optical Color are red, yellow, and blue. In desktop publishing they call them cyan (blue), magenta (red), yellow (" "), and black is counted.
So when you are calibrating your monitor, you will have a choice of:
RGB - For Spectral Color. Use this is to calibrate to the actual colored light on the LCD screen on your monitor which is your best bet
*OR*
If you have a printer attached with 3 color cartridges + 1 black cartridge. Then, use
CMY+K - Again, that is for Optical Color, which would be the ink in your printer. That will allow you to calibrate more accurately what you see on your screen to what comes out of your printer. With some tinkering & fine tuning.
*HOWEVER*
RYB or RBY just allows you to calibrate to the 3 color cartridges with no consideration for the black cartridge even though the printer may use it to shade the other 3 colors.
*So go either RGB or CMY+K.*
Try this quiz
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
Pretty elementary!
It is Vincent van Gogh not Vincent van gough
Only at weekends!!!
I was just gonna say that.
th-cam.com/video/rD54l46Tzvw/w-d-xo.html
I was looking for this coment
Please check spelling. It’s Vincent Van Gogh. I stopped and wouldn’t continue.
oh kyeah you got to dance with your marm i don't know this one. you have another chance to affiliate with another group if my guess is right. unless you were a bully and misunderstood the fame game
Van Gogh* and Klimt* are far better than you.
18/20