The Difference between CMYK and
RGB Color
If you are designing anything in color, you should be
familiar with the two most common color models: RGB and CMYK. For
most day-to-day design intents and purposes, what you really need to know is
that RGB color is used for digital communications, like television or websites
and CMYK is used for stuff made for print, like brochures.
RGB stands for the colors Red, Green,
and Blue, the colors widely recognized in design fields as the primary
colors. The RGB model is known as an additive model, where colors are added
together to make up what we see on the screen. Basically, pixels on a
television set or computer monitor create tiny pixels that, if viewed under a
magnifying glass, are one of those three colors. Light is projected through
them, blending the colors on the eye’s retina to create the desired colors.
CMYK, on the other hand, stands for
the colors Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black. CMYK is a
subtractive model. This gets a bit complicated, but the idea with subtractive
models like CMYK is that colors from the spectrum are subtracted from natural
white light into dyes. These dyes, then, are printed onto
paper in tiny little cyan, magenta, yellow, and black dots.
If you were to take a magnifying glass to a magazine cover, for example, you would see that the main image is really just a bunch of dots spread out, some closer than others, to appear like the colors we want.
If you were to take a magnifying glass to a magazine cover, for example, you would see that the main image is really just a bunch of dots spread out, some closer than others, to appear like the colors we want.
You should at least be aware that CMYK and RGB are used
for different media. If you create a brochure, for example, using RGB color,
when you send it to the printer (who uses large bins of ink that are made in
cyan, magenta, yellow, and black), your colors won’t be quick right when
printed.
If you are working in Photoshop, make sure you set the
appropriate color mode (it is one of the options when you first open a new
document) for the media you expect to present your work in. If it’s a website,
RGB; if it’s going to be printed, CMYK.
Output
Colors When mixing:
- The color Red,
Green and Blue color the result will be White
- The color Cyan, Pink, Yellow the result will be Black.
- Mix two or more RGB colors, the result is
a color of CMYK colors ... Examples:
- The color Cyan, Pink, Yellow the result will be Black.
- Mix two or more RGB colors, the result is
a color of CMYK colors ... Examples:
·
Red + Green = Yellow
·
Red + Blue = Magenta
·
Green + Blue =
Cyan
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