What Two Colors Can I Use to Make Terracotta?
- The simplest way of mixing terracotta is to use red and orange. However, you should try for a combination of red and orange that won't end up too bright, or you will end up with red-orange rather than terracotta. Try using a cool red, such as burgundy, with a warm orange, or a cool orange with a warm red, such as alizarin crimson.
- You can also create terracotta by mixing a warm light brown with red. Several light brown pigments are available in acrylic and oil paints, as well as home interior paints. Try combining burnt sienna or raw sienna with a medium red. Mix gradually until you get the color you want.
- Yellow and violet are what is known as complementary colors. Situated opposite each other on the color wheel, they create a neutral grey when equal amounts are mixed together. Using red violet instead of true violet, though, will yield color more orange than grey -- just the color of terracotta. Play with the ratios to find the right color for you.
- If you want a reddish, muted shade of terracotta, mix a bright green, such as a grass green, with red. Like yellow and violet, green and red are complementary colors, and will create a greyish brown when mixed together in equal parts. The brightness of the green will help the red retain its basic color, but it will give the new color that earthy tone associated with terracotta.
- You can create a color that approximates terracotta by mixing orange with black. Unlike other combinations, which require more or less equal amounts of paint, this one requires that you be very sparing with one of the colors. It is easy to add too much black and end up with a color that is unusable. Add a little bit of black at a time and mix it thoroughly into the orange before adding more.
Red and Orange
Light Brown and Red
Red Violet and Yellow
Bright Green and Red
Orange and Black
Source...