• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

Color issue going from RGB to CMYK.

SightLine

║▌║█║▌│║▌║▌█
Any ideas on how to "keep" this blue as it is shown on the attachment while converting the file to CMYK? Have a customer who provided the original image - using it for multiple things like banners and whatnot. Everything I print looks great but when I get their business cards done it comes out very purple - if I convert the image to CMYK ahead of time (like 4over prefers) then it looks atrocious. I'm hoping I can convert the background to CMYK but everything I try in photoshop after conversion - I cannot get the blue even remotely close.

On things I print in house (using CMYK inks) I can nail them near dead on. I created all of our own profiles but sumbitting files for print on offset like this is a bit new to me. Most of the cards I've done in the past have came out pretty darn close - even if I convert them to CMYK (SWOP) in photoshop ahead of time or not. Just seems that the blue on this one is impossible to hit if the file is CMYK. :frustrated:
 

Attachments

  • evblue.jpg
    evblue.jpg
    59.3 KB · Views: 83

signswi

New Member
Almost the entire image is out of gamut for CMYK. Open it up in Photoshop, go to View->Gamut Warning and look for yourself. Or mouse over an area with the Info window up and notice all the ! marks on the CMYK side of the window (out of gamut).

You're not going to hit those colors with CMYK alone.

Looking at it quickly Converting to GRACoL2006_Coated1v2 using ACE with Perceptual intent and Black Point Compensation is a decent starting point, at least it's still sort-of blue, not purple. Almost no vibrancy though.

You've tried just letting your RIP do the conversion already? Large Format RIPs properly calibrated can handle a slightly wider CMYK gamut than default CMYK color spaces...that's usually the best option.

Edit: I see now you mentioned 4over...this is why I build relationships with local printers. When I design for offset I don't touch the conversion and let the print house handle it as they've calibrated color spaces for their specific equipment. Let them work their magic, check the soft-proofs, and do a press check on the live runs until I'm comfortable enough with the vendor to skip them.
 
Last edited:

Master's Touch

New Member
You are just going to have to take it on the chin on this and realize you may not get that level of vibrancy. In situations like this, I convert the image to cmyk if Ive designed in RGB and just let it do what it will. Then I work with the color controls in photoshop to get it as close as I can. That's the best you are going to get for offset press.
 

Rooster

New Member
The gamut of a large format inkjet (especially blue) is far superior to what's attainable by an offset press using just CMYK.

You'd need to add a special blue to your offset run to match the color properly.
 
Top