Letterbox Mike
New Member
Yeah Bob, I'm not sure what you're doing but I just tried what you're talking about with about 20 vastly different files, all CMYK, and observed absolutely no color change whatsoever in any of them.
Yeah Bob, I'm not sure what you're doing but I just tried what you're talking about with about 20 vastly different files, all CMYK, and observed absolutely no color change whatsoever in any of them.
Merely because you couldn't detect any color difference does not mean that the files were identical.
By the numbers...
1. Open a CMYK jpg in your favorite program. Mine's Corel.
2. Export the image to another file, call it 'File1.jpg', in CMYK.
3. Import 'File1.jpg'.
4. Export the image to yet another file, call it 'File2.jpg', in CMYK.
5. Do Start->Run... enter 'command' in the text box
6. In the command window do a CD to the directory that contains File1.jpg and File2.jpg.
7. Do 'FC File1.jpg File2.jpg'
8. The differences, if any, between the two files will list in the command window.
Whether there might be visually detectable or even comparative differences depends on just what is in the files. End case colors like red, blue, green, yellow, etc are well defined and probably don't encounter much in the way of shifting. On the other hand, delicate mid-range colors such as a taupe or most any other pastel tone for that matter often can see a dramatic shift.
Time and time again bob has proven he doesn't understand color spaces.
Bob, you're confusing translation with conversion. When a CMYK file is read in an RGB device the color information is translated for display. The color data is never converted unless you specifically change color spaces.
Even jpeg compression doesn't mess with color space conversion, what it does is mess up actual pixel data through compression that creates artifacts with new color values. This is NOT the same thing as a color shift.
Let's pretend we have one big block cyan taking up the entire canvas.
File Information:
Color Space: CMYK Swap 2
Color Value : 100 C 0 M 0 Y 0 K
When you open up the file in PS, PS will read the 100C and translate the information to RGB values, send them to the monitor and the monitor will display accordingly.
The file has not changed color space. The values of the pixels have not changed CMYK mixture.
When you hit save again Photoshop does nothing with the RGB values provided for monitor displays.
It looks at the data file and saves:
Color Space: CMYK Swap 2
Color Value : 100 C 0 M 0 Y 0 K
No conversion has occurred to the file data.
By coming up with my own standard workflow, and remaining consistent with that, & using my Pantone-to-CMYK fan-deck, or those CMYK charts I mentioned.. I have 5 years of consistent results, happy customers.. and I never took any Greek classes or made a single profile of my own... works for me
What? PhotoShop has a Colour Management Policy of Convert to Working CMYK ... please explain what that means.
So you claim to have developed your own work flow. Please do tell which Pantone-to-CMYK fan deck you possess? Is it the U or C? Maybe your clients are just happy with pleasing colour?
got all that Paula? :ROFLMAO:
me neither... but I save as RGB 99% of the time & I've read threads such as this for 5 years & 99% of others send RGB files as well... that's all I need to know.
I print large CMYK color charts (showing hundreds of swatchs, with CMYK values printed right there) on my most common media, but I output those charts as RGB files as well... then I know what cmyk values to set up in illustrator or photoshop, to get matching colors on my chart... by saving final .tiff file as RGB. I also use .tiff files 99% of the time, even for all my vector artwork.
By coming up with my own standard workflow, and remaining consistent with that, & using my Pantone-to-CMYK fan-deck, or those CMYK charts I mentioned.. I have 5 years of consistent results, happy customers.. and I never took any Greek classes or made a single profile of my own... works for me
Too bad there's so much bullsh*t attitude in this thread...would've been interesting otherwise.
I have been so crazy bz...it is just now that I have been able to read these posts. Wow! and so many opinions! And alot of it is way over my head.I have been staying in RGB and everything seems ok. The dam flexi 8.6 not so much. Tomorrow I am sure I will be on the phone with tech support....and my new designer starts. We have so much work I hope I can get this chick up to speed quickly.
Thanks so much for everyone's suggestions. You guys are great!
Paula
There's no way you'll get a RICH RED in RGB like the one you get CMYK.
I don't let any of my programs do auto conversion of color spaces, I set them to respect embedded profiles, if none available then it asks.
Working CMYK is the "default" color space that the CS suit assumes you want to use. I believe default CMYK is US Swap 2.
If you open a CMYK file that's embedded with anything else, and your color settings say to automatically convert, then yes when you open a non Swap 2 file it will be mapped and converted between color spaces.
"claim" ??
You have a reputation in my book as being way too full of yourself most of the time, so lead your little imaginary class here if you wish, but don't bother calling on me to answer to you, as I have no intention of wasting my time with your high drama.