spot can be any color.
It is VERY difficult to color just a spot.
The red spot is red and it is getting smaller.
Using the eye dropper tool select the color of your choice. double click on the swatch to open the color picker window. Or by going to Edit>Fill>Color this will also open the color picker In the color picker window go to "color libraries" under that drop down menu select the spot color book of your choice, typically pantone is the standard. This will match your color to the closest possible spot color.
You are mistaken. The red spot is on Jupiter, not the sun (and it actually is red in color, hence the name).
Black Diamond is an investment group with controlling interests in both Hines Nursery and Color Spot Nursery.
Spot printing is a printing technique which normally uses a limited number of color Pantone inks, which are combined to develop a large range of standard colors and is known as "spot color" printing. Generally, spot-color inks are specific formulations that are designed to print alone, rather than to blend with other inks on the paper/plastic to produce various hues and shades. The range of available spot color inks, much like paint, is nearly unlimited, and much more varied than the colors that can be produced by four-color-process printing. Spot-color inks range from subtle pastels to intense fluorescents to reflective metallics.
Light red
it changes every time but look at the color code for how to tell i its ruight wrong or right color wrong spot. keep the rights nevr use the wrongs aain and try theothr places for right color wrong spot until it is right
fuscia with purple spot
It is blue with big black spot.
No, a pure substance would only show a single color or spot in a chromatogram because it consists of only one compound without any impurities. Each compound present in a sample will appear as a distinct spot with a unique color in the chromatogram.
The difference between spot colors and process colors is the way the color is mixed. The best way to describe this is printing. When printing most printers will use 4 colored inks known as CMYK (Cyan Majenta Yellow and Black). A process color is created by mixing the CMYK colors together to get the different shades and colors within your printout. With Spot colors they are mixed to a certain color specifically and known as a Pantone or PMS color. Then this certain color cartrididge is placed in the printing press and printed. So in order to make a process and spot color print, special presses have 5 or more cartridges so they can print CMYK with extra spot colors. Now the reason why there are Spot colours is to keep a certain color that won't change throughout all printing and design. Having a specific color throughout a logo is very important to many businesses as a slight change in color from just using a process color can change the whole look of a logo. In most cases the problem is too much of one color when printing in CMYK. For example a logo that we have previously printed was a light organge and was pressed with a process color of CMYK. The result was a very bright yellow, making the corporate logo look playful instead of clean and slick. While if instead was printed to the spot color, this problem wouldn't of occured and the spot color would be reflected as seen on your digital design (as long as your screen has been calibrated).