ok, just with a doubt......photoshop have this option, color settings......so it say...sRGB iec61966-2.1.........and i have this option for my monitor.......rgb p70f........so if i change it does it change on the impresion, the colors or something?.......also on the CMYK
Designers question....
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Designers question....
https://soundcloud.com/jorgecortes/j...t-s-julio-2013">https://soundcloud.com/jorgecortes/j...t-s-julio-2013
All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.Tags: None -
Re: Designers question....
if you are designing for print , you should always use the CMYK set up. monitors and calibration vary from one another. basically even if you calibrate it. what you see on the screen will never be exactly the color you wanted or what you think it is. best way to avoid this is to use the pantone color guide (for print) and enter the exact number you want. for monitor resolution use the web color guide.
hope this helpsComment
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Re: Designers question....
Remoh beat me to it. Though I don't make much use of photoshop, I'd rather stick to fireworks as my main design programme. But fireworks doesn't use CMYK colors, so sometimes I just need to.
But yeah: RGB is better for screen purposes, CMYK for printing, as far as i know.Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.
There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -HemingwayComment
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Re: Designers question....
Adjusting those values should help you see on your monitor the exact colour you're using on Photoshop. As the guys said before, if you're going to do some (professional) printing jobs, you should work with CMYK.
RGB means Red, Green, Blue. It's used in monitors, because light is made of those three colours. Different RGB values = different light colour.
CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and blacK (it's black, but it's called something else, can't remember it right now...) which are the colours used on four colour printing systems (widely used systems).
So, changing Photoshop's colour profile will help you see more accurate colours on your monitor, CMYK values will help you know how will it look on paper (on a CMYK printer, that is).Comment
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Re: Designers question....
nice thaanks very much......so......i ask about the rgb coz when im doing something on photoshop looks brighter when i export it to jpg in jpg looks darker......and on cmyk some colors change a little bit....thanks anyway....https://soundcloud.com/jorgecortes/j...t-s-julio-2013">https://soundcloud.com/jorgecortes/j...t-s-julio-2013
All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.Comment
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Re: Designers question....
you will only get drastic color change when printing. you should have very close colours when you use a compression algorithm such as the jpeg format.
as advised above. if you really want to be accurate with colors for print use http://www.pantone.com/pantone_v1.asp.
i naturally work in CMYK. I feel there is not need to to go to RGB and vice versa.dead, yet alive.Comment
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Re: Designers question....
the only bad thing about working in CMYK is that not all photoshop effects are available. switch back and forth to get all the desired filters (then again half of them you will hardly use)Comment
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Re: Designers question....
i think CMYK tends to make colours less bright but its much cheaper to get printed.
printing in rgb is extremely expensive in comparison.Comment
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