Adobe 13101332 User Guide - Page 122

Specifying ink colors, To enter custom ink color values

Page 122 highlights

Adobe Photoshop Help Using Help | Contents | Index Producing Consistent Color (Photoshop) Back 122 Specifying ink colors The Ink Colors menu lets you choose from the following options: • The preset ink options are designed to produce quality separations using standard inks and printing specifications. These ink standards differ slightly from one another. Similarly, the color and ink absorption qualities of the paper stock affect the final printed result.You can think of this information as telling Photoshop what printed cyan, magenta, yellow, and black look like given a certain set of inks and paper stock under your lighting conditions. • The Custom option lets you customize the on-screen display of ink colors to match printed output by entering values obtained from a color proof. (See "Printing a hard proof" on page 127.) For example, you may want to use the Custom option to specify an ink set not listed as a preset option. When you change these settings, you change the profile that Photoshop uses to display the ink colors on-screen. See the following procedure for instructions on entering custom ink values. • If you have loaded a CMYK profile or color settings file that has been saved outside the recommended location, the ink setting for that profile or settings file temporarily replaces the Other option in the Ink Colors menu. Note: In most cases, printing ink characteristics do not vary greatly from printer to printer within the same printer type. For example, one Tektronix Phaser II printer prints ink hues very similar to another one. But the amount of dot gain can vary significantly. Thus, for a different printer of the same type, you may have to change the dot gain setting in the CMYK Setup dialog box but not the printing ink colors. To enter custom ink color values: 1 In the Custom CMYK dialog box, for Ink Colors, choose Custom. By default, the Ink Colors dialog box defines colors using the CIE coordinates of Y (lightness), x, and y values. The default ink sets are calibrated for viewing conditions of 5000 K (when viewed under D50 lighting), 2° field of view. CIE coordinates are an international color definition standard supported by PostScript Level 2 and higher. Note: Colors appear slightly different based on how much of the eye's field of view they cover. The CIE has defined two standard ways of measuring color coordinates, one based on colors filling 10° of the eye's field of view, and one based on colors filling 2° of the field of view. Photoshop uses the 2° field of view standard. 2 If desired, select L*a*b Coordinates to enter the color box coordinates as Lab values rather than Yxy values. Use this option if your spectrophotometer only has Lab readouts. 3 Using your printed CMYK proof, take a reading of the color values using a spectrophotometer, and then enter those values in the appropriate text boxes. Alternatively, you can click the color box of the ink color you want to adjust and then adjust the color on-screen until it matches the patch on the color proof. Make sure that you are viewing the proof under the proper lighting conditions. 4 If desired, select Estimate Overprints to automatically estimate the overprint colors (MY, CY, CM, and CMY) using the CMYK and white values you entered.This is useful if you don't have a spectrophotometer. Using Help | Contents | Index Back 122

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122
Adobe Photoshop Help
Producing Consistent Color (Photoshop)
U
sing H
elp
|
C
on
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|
Inde
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B
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122
Specifying ink colors
The Ink Colors menu lets you choose from the following options:
The preset ink options are designed to produce quality separations using standard inks
and printing specifications. These ink standards differ slightly from one another.
Similarly, the color and ink absorption qualities of the paper stock affect the final
printed result. You can think of this information as telling Photoshop what printed cyan,
magenta, yellow, and black look like given a certain set of inks and paper stock under
your lighting conditions.
The Custom option lets you customize the on-screen display of ink colors to match
printed output by entering values obtained from a color proof. (See
P
r
in
ting a har
d
pr
o
of
on page
127
.) For example, you may want to use the Custom option to specify
an ink set not listed as a preset option. When you change these settings, you change
the profile that Photoshop uses to display the ink colors on-screen. See the following
procedure for instructions on entering custom ink values.
If you have loaded a CMYK profile or color settings file that has been saved outside the
recommended location, the ink setting for that profile or settings file temporarily
replaces the Other option in the Ink Colors menu.
Note:
In most cases, printing ink characteristics do not vary greatly from printer to printer
within the same printer type. For example, one Tektronix Phaser II printer prints ink hues
very similar to another one. But the amount of dot gain can vary significantly. Thus, for a
different printer of the same type, you may have to change the dot gain setting in the
CMYK Setup dialog box but not the printing ink colors.
To enter custom ink color values:
1
In the Custom CMYK dialog box, for Ink Colors, choose Custom.
By default, the Ink Colors dialog box defines colors using the CIE coordinates of
Y
(lightness),
x
, and
y
values. The default ink sets are calibrated for viewing conditions of
5000 K (when viewed under D50 lighting), 2° field of view. CIE coordinates are an interna-
tional color definition standard supported by PostScript Level 2 and higher.
Note:
Colors appear slightly different based on how much of the eye’s field of view they
cover. The CIE has defined two standard ways of measuring color coordinates, one based
on colors filling 10° of the eye’s field of view, and one based on colors filling 2° of the field of
view. Photoshop uses the 2° field of view standard.
2
If desired, select L*a*b Coordinates to enter the color box coordinates as Lab values
rather than
Yxy
values. Use this option if your spectrophotometer only has Lab readouts.
3
Using your printed CMYK proof, take a reading of the color values using a spectropho-
tometer, and then enter those values in the appropriate text boxes.
Alternatively, you can click the color box of the ink color you want to adjust and then
adjust the color on-screen until it matches the patch on the color proof. Make sure that
you are viewing the proof under the proper lighting conditions.
4
If desired, select Estimate Overprints to automatically estimate the overprint colors
(MY, CY, CM, and CMY) using the CMYK and white values you entered. This is useful if you
don’t have a spectrophotometer.