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Paint Color Mixing Ratios Calculator

Calculate the mixing ratio for two paint colors to achieve your desired shade.
Works for wall paint, acrylic, and craft paints.

Mixing Ratio

Paint color mixing combines two or more colors in specific ratios to achieve a desired intermediate shade, tint, or hue. Understanding the math behind mixing prevents wasted paint and costly color mismatches.

Core principle: Color mixing ratios express how many “parts” of each color combine in the final mix. A 3:1 ratio means 3 parts Color A for every 1 part Color B — a total of 4 parts.

Formula for calculating volumes: Color A Amount = Total Volume × (A parts ÷ Total parts) Color B Amount = Total Volume × (B parts ÷ Total parts)

Common mixing ratios and their effects:

Ratio (Base:Colorant) Effect
20:1 Very light tint (barely noticeable)
10:1 Light tint
4:1 Soft mid-tone
2:1 Strong mid-tone
1:1 Equal blend
1:2 Darker shade dominates

Worked example: You need 1 gallon (128 oz) of a medium green, mixing white and deep green at a 3:1 ratio. White = 128 × (3/4) = 96 oz (¾ gallon) Green = 128 × (1/4) = 32 oz (¼ gallon) Result: 128 oz of mixed paint

Critical rules for successful color mixing:

  1. Add dark to light, never light to dark — darker colors overwhelm fast; go slowly
  2. Mix more than you need — matching an exact custom color later is nearly impossible
  3. Test on a swatch and let dry — wet paint is always 10–15% lighter than dry paint
  4. Use the same paint brand and finish — mixing sheens (matte + gloss) produces unpredictable results
  5. Record your ratio precisely — write down the exact amounts used before you start

Paint color theory: Yellow + Blue = Green; Red + Blue = Purple; Red + Yellow = Orange. Adding white creates a tint; adding black creates a shade; adding gray creates a tone.


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