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Cofer715

: The colour of my RGB document changed drasticly when converted to CMYK in Illustrator I have been supplied with some graphics for a large format print. The graphic is vibrant red on rich black

@Cofer715

Posted in: #AdobeIllustrator #Cmyk #ColorConversion #Rgb #Transparency

I have been supplied with some graphics for a large format print. The graphic is vibrant red on rich black overlayed with all kinds of gradients.

When I convert the artwork from RGB to CMYK the red colour in the design which interacts with transparency is drastically washed out while other reds remain vibrant.

Is there a way of optimising the colour transposition to retain certain colours? Am I missing out a stage of the colour profile change?

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@Yeniel278

There are two colors that are pain in the part of your back when they lost it name.
First is called "Money color" or green.
Second one is "Tomato" or red.

Both of these look good on screen but in print, because is made from mixing two paints, it can easily shift to different color.

So what to do? There are profiles set up exactly for that purpose where they try to keep red or green (not both though) as vibrant as they can. Those profiles can be shipped with specific machines as offset printing and solvent have different specification.

And at the and, as always, I encourage you to read great book by Dan Margulis that cover all those problems when you want/need to adjust the photos or materials manually.
And consult with your printer about his method and don't be afraid of preparing cromalin with different settings.
Remember, sometimes watching at printout in office or natural light can make the difference.

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@Tiffany317

RGB to CMYK changes the color because you switch to different model and in practical a CMYK printer uses different combinations and a key color.

You should create a rectangle in CMYK, try to eye drop the color from RGB image and manually fix the color grades to fit the RGB color.

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@Kevin459

Which is a problem with the color models RGB vs. CMYK. The range of colours using RGB is quite bigger than using CMYK. Or the other way round: not every RGB-Color can be printed CMYK. You'll (the software/converter) have to "scale it down" to CMYK. The result is mostly type of "reduced brillance".

So drawing for CMYK/Printing purposes, start with using CMYK-colors. Pictures will have to be transformed anyway.

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@Bryan765

Printers and RIP software will do the color conversion in the RIP so in most cases there is no need to convert to CMYK. This is true for some older printers also, as long as the most current profile is being used. I say in most cases because there will be the exception here and there to that rule also. As long as the images are optimized (resolution, etc.) for the final print just about any RIP software will give you great results, you may have to do some minor tweaking but usually not much.

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