Re: Theoretical CMYK Profile
Re: Theoretical CMYK Profile
- Subject: Re: Theoretical CMYK Profile
- From: Daniel Colish <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 16:09:57 -0400
The article didn't specify at all, but I would assume in Photoshop it's
Adobe '98. I think the main thing I didn't get was how a CMYK profile could
encompass and RGB profile when they model two differenet color systems. For
instance: RGB(0,0,100) cannot be output at CMYK(100,98,22,34). There is just
too much ink. In the article, there seemed to be no problem with this
because the useage of the CMYK profile was to get the benefits of the black
channel for sharpening, etc; it would never actually be printed. I just
found it odd that the author would recommend building a CMYK profile that
had no limits, rather than using LAB.
On 5/11/06 4:01 PM, "Andrew Rodney" <email@hidden> wrote:
> On 5/11/06 10:02 AM, "Daniel Colish" wrote:
>
>> I was reading an article in Photoshop user about image sharpening and the
>> author discussed the option of a CMYK profile that was custom designed to
>> have ink limits and purity that encompassed the entire RGB colorspace.
>
> WHAT RGB color space? Let's start there...
>
> Andrew Rodney
> http://www.digitaldog.net/
>
>
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Daniel Colish
Bill SMITH STUDIO
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