Information about Cmyk
CMYK (short for cyan, magenta, yellow, and key (black), and often referred to as process color or four color) is a subtractive color model, used in color printing, also used to describe the printing process itself. Though it varies by print house, press operator, press manufacturer and press run, ink is typically applied in the order of the acronym.[1]
The CMYK model works by partially or entirely masking certain colors on the typically white background (that is, absorbing particular wavelengths of light). Such a model is called subtractive because inks “subtract” brightness from white.
In additive color models such as RGB, white is the “additive” combination of all primary colored lights, while black is the absence of light. In the CMYK model, it is just the opposite: white is the natural color of the paper or other background, while black results from a full combination of colored inks. To save money on ink, and to produce deeper black tones, unsaturated and dark colors are produced by substituting black ink for the combination of cyan, magenta and yellow.
Halftoning

This close-up of printed halftone rasters show that magenta on top of yellow appears as orange/red, and cyan on top of yellow appears as green.
Without halftoning, the three primary process colors could be printed only as solid blocks of color, and therefore could produce only six colors: the three primaries themselves, plus three complementary colors produced by layering two of the primaries—cyan and yellow produce green; cyan and magenta produce a purplish blue; yellow and magenta produce red (these subtractive complementary colors correspond roughly to the additive primary colors). With halftoning, a full continuous range of colors can be produced.
Screen angle
To improve print quality and reduce moiré patterns, the screens for individual colors are set at unique angles. While the specific angles depend on how many colors are used and the preference of the press operator, typical CMYK process printing uses any of the following screen angles:[2][3]
| C | 75° | 15° | 105° |
|---|---|---|---|
| M | 15° | 45° | 75° |
| Y | 0° | 0° | 90° |
| K | 45° | 75° | 15° |
Why black ink is used
The “black” generated by mixing Cyan, Magenta and Yellow primaries is unsatisfactory, and so four-color printing uses black ink in addition to the subtractive primaries. Common reasons for using black ink include:[4]- Text is typically printed in black and includes fine detail (such as serifs), so to reproduce text or other finely detailed outlines using three inks without slight blurring would require impractically accurate registration (i.e. all three images would need to be aligned extremely precisely).
- A combination of 100% cyan, magenta, and yellow inks soaks the paper with ink, making it slower to dry, and sometimes impractically so.
- A combination of 100% cyan, magenta, and yellow inks often results in a muddy dark brown color that does not quite appear black. Adding black ink absorbs more light, and yields much “blacker” blacks.
- Using black ink is less expensive than using the corresponding amounts of colored inks.
The amount of black to use to replace amounts of the other ink is variable, and the choice depends on the technology, paper and ink in use. Processes called under color removal, under color addition, and gray component replacement are used to decide on the final mix; different CMYK recipes will be used depending on the printing task.
Other printer color models
CMYK or process color printing is contrasted with spot color printing, in which specific colored inks are used (without halftoning) to produce the colors appearing on paper. Some printing presses are capable of printing with both four-color process inks and additional spot color inks at the same time. High-quality printed materials, such as marketing brochures and books, may include photographs requiring process-color printing, other graphic effects requiring spot colors (such as metallic inks), and finishes such as varnish, which enhances the glossy appearance of the printed piece.CMYK process printers often have a relatively small color gamut. Processes such as Pantone's proprietary six-color (CMYKOG) Hexachrome can considerably expand the gamut. Additionally, light, saturated colors often cannot be created with CMYK, and light colors in general can make visible the halftone pattern. Using a CcMmYK process, with the addition of light cyan and magenta inks to CMYK, can solve these problems, and such a process is used by many desktop inkjet printers.[6]
Comparison with RGB
Comparisons between RGB displays and CMYK prints can be difficult, since the color reproduction technologies and properties are so different. A laser or ink-jet printer prints in dots per inch (dpi) which is very different from a computer screen, which displays graphics in pixels per inch (ppi). A computer screen mixes shades of red, green, and blue to create color pictures. A CMYK printer must compete with the many shades of RGB with only one shade of each of cyan, magenta and yellow, which it will mix using dithering, halftoning or some other optical technique; this dithering produces a lower level of detail than the printer's dpi suggests.Conversion
Since RGB and CMYK spaces are both device-dependent spaces, there is no simple or general conversion formula that converts between them. Conversions are generally done through color management systems, using color profiles that describe the spaces being converted. Nevertheless, the conversions can not be exact, since these spaces have very different gamuts.The problem of computing a colorimetric estimate of the color that results from printing various combinations of ink has been addressed by many scientists.[7] A general method that has emerged for the case of halftone printing is to treat each tiny overlap of color dots as one of 8 (combinations of CMY) or of 16 (combinations of CMYK) colors, which in this context are known as Neugebauer primaries. The resultant color would be an area-weighted colorimetric combination of these primary colors, except that the Yule–Nielsen effect ("dot gain") of scattered light between and within the areas complicates the physics and the analysis; empirical formulas for such analysis have been developed, in terms of detailed dye combination absorption spectra and empirical parameters.[7]
References
1. ^ Press Operator (interview) October 27, 2006. Dynagraphics.
2. ^ Campbell, Alastair. The Designer's Lexicon. ©2000 Chronicle, San Francisco. p 192
3. ^ McCue, Claudia. Real World Print Production. ©2007 Peachpit, Berkeley. p 31.
4. ^ Roger Pring (2000). WWW.Color. Watson–Guptill. ISBN 0823058573.
5. ^ R. S. Hodges (2003). . John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0823058573.
6. ^ Carla Rose (2003). Sams Teach Yourself Adobe Photoshop Elements 2 in 24 Hours. Sams Publishing. ISBN 067232430X.
7. ^ Gaurav Sharma (2003). Digital Color Imaging Handbook. CRC Press. ISBN 084930900X.
2. ^ Campbell, Alastair. The Designer's Lexicon. ©2000 Chronicle, San Francisco. p 192
3. ^ McCue, Claudia. Real World Print Production. ©2007 Peachpit, Berkeley. p 31.
4. ^ Roger Pring (2000). WWW.Color. Watson–Guptill. ISBN 0823058573.
5. ^ R. S. Hodges (2003). . John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0823058573.
6. ^ Carla Rose (2003). Sams Teach Yourself Adobe Photoshop Elements 2 in 24 Hours. Sams Publishing. ISBN 067232430X.
7. ^ Gaurav Sharma (2003). Digital Color Imaging Handbook. CRC Press. ISBN 084930900X.
See also
External links
- Color conversion (RGB / CMYK / HSV / YUV / ...) -- online conversion between color models
- XCmyk - CMYK to RGB Calculator with source code
- Color Space Fundamentals -- animated illustration of RGB vs. CMYK
Color space Color models |
|---|
| RGB color spaces RGB color model CMYK color model HSV color space HSL color space RYB color model CIELAB (L*a*b*) YUV for PAL television YDbDr for SECAM television YIQ for NTSC television |
Cyan (from Greek κυανός, meaning "blue") may be used as the name of any of a number of a range of colors in the blue/green part of the spectrum.
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MAGENTA
General
Michael Jacobson Jr., Klaus Huber
1998
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Feistel network
6 or 8
In cryptography, MAGENTA
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General
Michael Jacobson Jr., Klaus Huber
1998
Cipher detail
Key size(s):| 128, 192 or 256 bits
Block size(s):| 128 bits
Feistel network
6 or 8
In cryptography, MAGENTA
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Yellow is the color evoked by light that stimulates both the L and M (long- and medium-wavelength) cone cells of the retina about equally, but does not significantly stimulate the S
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Black is the color of objects that do not reflect light in any part of the visible spectrum.
Scientifically, a black object absorbs all the colors of the visible spectrum and reflects none of them.
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Scientifically, a black object absorbs all the colors of the visible spectrum and reflects none of them.
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subtractive color model explains the mixing of paints, dyes, inks, and natural colorants to create a range of colors, where each such color is caused by the mixture absorbing some wavelengths of light and reflecting others.
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A color model is an abstract mathematical model describing the way colors can be represented as tuples of numbers, typically as three or four values or color components. When this model is associated with a precise description of how the components are to be interpreted (viewing
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Color printing is the reproduction of an image or text in color (as opposed to simpler black and white or monochrome printing).
The method used to print a full range of colors (colour - UK), such as for reproducing a color photograph, is referred to as
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The method used to print a full range of colors (colour - UK), such as for reproducing a color photograph, is referred to as
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Color or colour[1] (see spelling differences) is the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, yellow, blue, black, etc.
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In physics, wavelength is the distance between repeating units of a propagating wave of a given frequency. It is commonly designated by the Greek letter lambda (λ). Examples of wave-like phenonomena are light, water waves, and sound waves.
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Brightness is an attribute of visual perception in which a source appears to emit a given amount of light. In other words, brightness is the perception elicited by the luminance of a visual target. This is a subjective attribute/property of an object being observed.
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additive color model involves light emitted directly from a source or illuminant of some sort. The additive reproduction process usually uses red, green and blue light to produce the other colors. See also RGB color model.
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RGB color model is an additive model in which red, green, and blue (often used in additive light models) are combined in various ways to reproduce other colors. The name of the model and the abbreviation ‘RGB’ come from the three primary colors, red, green, and blue and
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Primary Colors: A Novel of Politics
Author Joe Klein
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Political novel
Publisher Random House
Publication date January 16, 1996
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Author Joe Klein
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Political novel
Publisher Random House
Publication date January 16, 1996
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colorfulness, chroma, and saturation are related concepts referring to the intensity of a specific color. More technically, colorfulness is the perceived difference between the color of some stimulus and gray, chroma
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Halftone is the reprographic technique that simulates continuous tone imagery through the use of equally spaced dots of varying size.[1] 'Halftone' can also be used to refer specifically to the image that is produced by this process.
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Halftone is the reprographic technique that simulates continuous tone imagery through the use of equally spaced dots of varying size.[1] 'Halftone' can also be used to refer specifically to the image that is produced by this process.
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Color vision is the capacity of an organism or machine to distinguish objects based on the wavelengths (or frequencies) of the light they reflect or emit. The nervous system derives color by comparing the responses to light from the several types of cone photoreceptors in the eye.
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A moiré pattern (IPA: /mwɑːˈreɪ, ˈmɔəreɪ/) is an interference pattern created, for example, when two grids are overlaid at an angle, or when they have slightly different mesh sizes.
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additive primary colors of a CRT color video display]] Primary colors are sets of colors that can be combined to make a useful range (gamut) of colors. For human applications, three are often used; for additive combination of colors, as in overlapping projected lights or in
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Color printing is the reproduction of an image or text in color (as opposed to simpler black and white or monochrome printing).
The method used to print a full range of colors (colour - UK), such as for reproducing a color photograph, is referred to as
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The method used to print a full range of colors (colour - UK), such as for reproducing a color photograph, is referred to as
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In typography, serifs are non-structural details on the ends of some of the strokes that make up letters and symbols. A font that has serifs is called a serif font (or seriffed font).
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Registration is a term used in the printing and desktop publishing industry. It is the method of correlating color separations.
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Definition
Registration is printing specific extra marks so that different artwork can be aligned...... Click the link for more information.
Rich black, in printing, is an ink mixture of solid black over one or more of the other (CMYK) colors.[1], resulting in a darker tone than black ink alone generates in a printing process.
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In four-color printing (or more) under color removal (UCR) is the process of eliminating amounts of yellow, magenta, and cyan that would have added to a dark neutral (black) and replacing them with black ink during the color separation process.
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In four-color printing (or more), under color addition (UCA) is a technique for darkening areas of the printed image by adding colored inks. It is meant to achieve the same results as under color removal, but from a different starting position.
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greying agent. However, as that greying agent has an inherent hue of its own, it also shifts the hue as it changes the saturation of the resulting color. The most efficient way to change the saturation of a given color while maintaining the same hue angle is to use the Key (Black)
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In offset printing, a spot color is any color generated by an ink (pure or mixed) that is printed using a single run.
The widely-spread offset printing process is composed of four spot colors: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Key (black) commonly referred to as CMYK.
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The widely-spread offset printing process is composed of four spot colors: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Key (black) commonly referred to as CMYK.
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gamut, or color gamut (pronounced /ˈgæmət/), is a certain complete subset of colors. The most common usage refers to the subset of colors which can be accurately represented in a given circumstance,
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Pantone Inc. is a corporation headquartered in Carlstadt, New Jersey, USA. The company is best known for its Pantone Matching System (PMS), a proprietary color space used in a variety of industries, primarily printing, though sometimes in the manufacture of colored
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Hexachrome is Pantone's six-color color printing process. In addition to custom CMYK inks, Hexachrome adds orange and green inks to expand the color gamut, for better color reproduction. It is therefore also referred as the CMYKOG process.
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