The
additive RG color model uses red and green primaries. It was used in several processes during the early innovations of color photography, including
Kinemacolor,
Prizma,
Technicolor I, and
Raycol. The primaries are added together in varying proportions to reproduce a linear gamut of
colors, which can reproduce only a fraction of the colors possible with a
trichromatic color space. The appearance of the
color gamut changes depending on the primary colors chosen. When the primaries are
complementary colors (e.g. red and cyan), then an equal mixture of the primaries will yield a neutral color (gray or white). However, since red and green are
not complementary colors, an equal mixture of these primaries will yield yellow, and a neutral color cannot be reproduced by the color space. Until recently, its primary use was in low-cost
LED displays in which red and green LEDs were more common and cheaper than the still nascent
blue LED technology. However, this preference no longer applies to modern devices. In modern applications, the red and green primaries are equal to the primaries used in typical
RGB color spaces. In this case, the RG color model can be achieved by disabling the blue light source. ==Subtractive RG==