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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

What are CMYK Separations?


Commercial print, be it magazine, newspaper, brochure, etc. uses a four colour printing process - CMYK. What does CMYK stand for? Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Key (which is Black).

CMYK printing works by separating the colours, for example, from a photograph, into 4 separate coloured inks using individual printing plates. When four coloured plates are printed onto a sheet of paper, they create an optical effect that to the viewer looks like the original image.
 



The diagram above demonstrates how the different colours of the spectrum can be achieved by combining cyan, magenta and yellow coloured inks. In an ideal world, the CMY inks combined would produce black; but because of impurities the actual colour is a dark brown. This is why Black ink is used in addition to CMY.

The following photographs show what the individual printing plates for cyan, magenta, yellow and black would look like when printed separately on white paper, and the large photo shows how the 4 CMYK separations combine to produce a final printed full colour image.
 C- Cyan
M- Magenta
Y- Yellow
K- Key
CMYK separations image

CMYK

Short for Cyan-Magenta-Yellow-Black, and pronounced as separate letters. CMYK is a color model in which all colors are described as a mixture of these four process colors. CMYK is the standard color model used in offset printing for full-color documents. Because such printing uses inks of these four basic colors, it is often called four-color printing.
In contrast, display devices generally use a different color model called RGB, which stands for Red-Green-Blue. One of the most difficult aspects of desktop publishing in color is color matching -- properly converting the RGB colors into CMYK colors so that what gets printed looks the same as what appears on the monitor

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