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2007-01-08 17:29:14 · 8 answers · asked by Phillip 4 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Drawing & Illustration

Don't insult me. I've been a graphic designer for nearly 15 years.

2007-01-08 18:56:45 · update #1

8 answers

C-cyan
M-magenta
Y-yellow
K-Black


They are the colors used in 4 color printing.

2007-01-08 17:34:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

CYMK stands for:

C = cyan
M = magenta
Y = yellow
K = black

The use of four-color printing (CMYK) generates a good final printed result with greater contrast. However, the color seen on a computer screen is often different from the color of the same object on a printout since CMYK and RGB have different color subsets.

Computer screens use an RGB (red, green, blue) color space. However, in printed materials, this combination cannot be directly reproduced, so computer-generated images must be converted to the CMYK equivalent in ink colors.

Printing a photograph or image requires transforming the image from the original RGB color space to the printer's CMYK color space.

During this process, the colors from the RGB must be somehow converted to approximate values within the CMYK colors. If this process of transformation is not done, the image becomes burnt.

Owners of digital capture devices (i.e. digital cameras) should note because traditional film is more "honest" than its digital counterpart, in that it performs more or less the same in capturing all three primary colors (the digital capture devices generally try to "cheat" on the user by storing as little color information as needed in order to satisfy its given sale characteristics, while also saving on sensors and storage space; this "cheating" is possible due to the characteristics of the human retina).

I hope that lengthy piece answers your question. :)

2007-01-08 18:19:20 · answer #2 · answered by ghostie 2 · 0 1

employing inventory photos is something many image designers face every day, previously they use a inventory image in very final paintings many will use a downloaded comp (oftentimes watermarked and consistently low selection) with a view to get approval from a shopper or in all hazard to coach a shopper the form of image which you will possibly cost a photographer to shoot (or illustrator to create). that must be an attitude you are able to undertake, yet for a portfolio that's significant which you latest your paintings in the terrific a hazard mild. For that i might purchase extreme selection photos and use them. you ought to have faith that there is no income touch – yet beginning your occupation is expounded to funds – that's a ethical question rather than a advertisement one, the type you answer that's as much as you (the two to your self and on your interviewers, and for many there could properly be 2 opposing solutions), in my view i may be extra gentle procuring any that featured great in my paintings and use the watermarked low res comps the place they are no longer “characteristic” products. And remember that certainly one of your interviewers is additionally a contributor to inventory image libraries.

2016-11-27 22:04:22 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I'd like to add that the reason why they are used is because printing colors is based on subtractive color mixing as it uses real pigment, while images on a computer screen use light and is color mixing is based on additive color mixing. So to convert from a light based to a pigment based system one changes from the RGB system to a CMYK system. Oh, and the Black is represented by K so it doesn't get confused with Blue in the RGB system.
Check out those links for more detail.

2007-01-09 00:38:19 · answer #4 · answered by eintigerchen 4 · 0 0

I run the 5330 Vutek at my company, CMYK stands for

C/Cyan
M/Magenta
Y/Yellow
K/Black
Not only is it set for 4head jet speed, but is also set for 8head jet speed, the difference is colortone. 8 is like picture perfect at 600dpi res. 4 is like 300dpi res.
using Light colors /Light Cyan, Light Magenta, Light Yellow, Light Black. along side with Cyan,Magenta,Yellow,black.
CMYK are really your darker colors, and for reasons of them being used is set for prepress operators to check swatches to help match what is seen on job orders, they could use RGB
which is the standard Red, Green, Blue. these three colors can not build a swatch of definite percision, so they use the 4 color system.
these are the only colors that can make all colors cept for white.
and most of the time the color structure is on point.

For more info on this subject, go to this site. you'll find all that you need to know and more.

2007-01-08 18:02:47 · answer #5 · answered by DJenks64 2 · 0 2

It's the color values of a print. it stands for Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, and Black(not CYMK-it's CYMB).The basic colors of printing, and photography. The numbers are values.

2007-01-08 17:38:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

C-cyan
M-magenta
Y-yellow
K-Black

2007-01-08 19:35:16 · answer #7 · answered by Sonu G 5 · 0 0

CMYK is a subtractive color model used in color printing.
C=cyan
M=magenta
Y=yellow
K=key (black).

2007-01-08 17:36:15 · answer #8 · answered by greβ 6 · 2 1

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