Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Fbaked not to get get all high and mighty but black isn't technically a color. Neither is white for that matter.But we all know what you mean!
You actually have that backwards. White is the absence of color. Black is all colors. Easy to prove try mixing a bunch of primary colors together. I promise you the end result won't be white. This of course is the application of color. Not the theory of light and refraction which is what you are refering to. Different rules and theories.Also U has been the standard for printing on textiles for the last 20 years. C is intended for offset printing. You will never match a C on a t shirt. to the original color. Unless of course you modify it then you might as well just mix by eye to begin with.
ink, you have that backwards. black absorbs all colors of the spectrum and white reflects them back...all together.
actually we are talking about two concepts. Reflective and transmittive or also called additive and subtractive color. In one case all of them combined create black (ink on a shirt, absorbing all the reflections) or white (think pink floyd prism, all the colors combined create white. Think RGB monitor or TV).So technically, you are both correct!!!