![]() |
|
|||||||||||||||||
CMYK color model(Redirected from CMYK color space)
The mixture of ideal CMY colors is subtractive (Cyan, Magenta and Yellow printed together on white result to black). CMYK works through light absorption . The colors that are seen are from the part of light that is not absorbed. In CMYK magenta plus yellow produces red, magenta plus cyan makes blue, cyan plus yellow generates green and the combination of cyan, magenta and yellow form black. Because the 'black' generated by mixing the subtractive primaries is not as dense as that of a genuine black ink (one that absorbs throughout the visible spectrum), four-color printing uses black ink in addition to the subtractive primaries yellow, magenta and cyan. Use of four-color printing generates a superior final printed result with greater contrast. However the color a person sees on a computer screen is often slightly different from the color of the same object on a printout since CMYK and the RGB color model used in computer monitors have different gamuts. RGB color is made by the emission of light (additive color) whereas CMYK works by the absorption of it (subtractive color).
ConversionsNote that the conversions here are best described as "nominal". They will produce a reversible conversion from RGB to CMYK and back again (though not vice versa). However, the CMYK colors may print wildly differently from how the RGB colors display on a monitor. There is no single "good" conversion rule between RGB and CMYK, because neither RGB nor CMYK is an absolute color space. Converting between RGB and CMYKTo convert between RGB and CMYK, an intermediate CMY value is used. Color values are represented as a vector, with each color component varying from 0.0 (no color) to 1.0 (fully saturated color):
Converting CMYK to RGBTo convert, we first convert CMYK to CMY, then convert the CMY value to RGB Converting now
then
and
or substituting in
Converting RGB to CMYKConverting RGB → CMY, with the same color vectors as before: Converting now
converting to CMY
and then to CMYK:
See also
External links
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
How to see transparent copy 01-04-2007 01:21:04 |
|






,
,