Red -- 0C / 100M / 100Y / 15K Orange -- 0C / 65M / 100Y / 0K (if you REALLY have patience, lay down 30Y first, then put the sheet back in the press and print the 65M / 100Y build) Yellow -- 0C / 10M / 100Y / 0K Green -- 100C / 15M / 100Y / 15K Blue -- 100C / 100M / 0Y / 0K Indigo -- 100C / 95M / 5Y / 40K Violet -- 60C / 100M / 0Y / 15K
For standard presses, the four color process can create one million colors.
CMYK are process colors of printing. Cyan Magenta Yellow Key/Black The K actually stands for the Key plate. When plates were used for printing, the black plate was also known as the key plate, which held all the artistic detail and information.
This is a complicated process. To begin, TPX in Pantone stands for Textile Paper Extended. These colors are meant for printing on fabric. When one has a CMYK image in Photoshop the colors can not just be converted. The only way to incorporate spot color (Pantone) into a rasterized CMYK image is as an extra plate, or spot color channel in Photoshop. One can also create a monotone, duotone or tritone from a CMYK image. To do this the image can not remain in CMYK mode. The process is much easier to do in a vector file. Using the eye dropper or color picker tool in Photoshop one can measure the amount of cyan, magenta, yellow and black in a specific area. Using the swatches palette open the appropriate Pantone library, find the desired color and measure the CMYK content in the same manner. This process will reveal the CMYK equivalent for that specific color.
RGB is usually the best and has the widest variety of colors
If you're printing the image on your desktop printer, use RGB--those printers will convert anything else to RGB, then to CMYK. If you're printing it on a wide-format inkjet printer like a Roland, Mutoh or VUtek, or you're sending it to a printing plant to be printed on an offset or flexo press, use CMYK if you're not using spot colors, and Pantone for the spot colors.
The dominant colors are red and yellow in the following CMYK delineations.Red: CMYK (%) 0-90-80-5Yellow: CMYK (%) 0-15-95-0There is also the seal of the Kingdom of Spain, which has numerous colors on it.
First check resolution from Image - Image Size, then convert to CMYK colors from Image - Mode - CMYK
well, let me try to explain the answer i am sure that you will reach to the answer... RGB and CMYK are different colour system. RGB Stands accordingly as Red, Green and Blue and CMYK stands accordingly as Cyan, Meganta, Yellow and Black. * RBG colour system is based on "The colour of light Rays" and * CMYK colour system is based on "The Reflection of light Rays" The Reflection of light is always dull than actual light so CMYK make the colors go dull.... - mayur_vaghela@yahoo.co.uk
roy g. biv....spells the colors of the rainbow.
The colors of the rainbow combine to make white light. Each color has a different wavelength, and when they are all combined, they create the full spectrum of colors that make up white light.
Red is made using Magenta and yellow. Look up the CMYK color system for a diagram,
CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and blacK, which are the four colors of ink used in standard color printing. A CMYK code is a set of four numbers representing the proportions of those four colors of ink, thus defining a color to be printed.
Yes, Photoshop CS2 has the capability to change RGB colors to CMYK colors. You can convert your RGB images to CMYK color mode by going to "Image" menu, selecting "Mode," and then choosing "CMYK Color."
The primary colors magenta and yellow can combine to make red.
If I'm not mistaking, but I believe there are 7 colors on a Rainbow.
Cyan, magenta, yellow, and key (black)
When you see a rainbow, you see seven different colors. Well the same thing appears in a rainbow wheel. When you spin the wheel, the colors combine and mix to make the color white. It's like a recipe. You add the seven colors of the rainbow and you make a white color. I hope this is the answer that you're looking for.