The process of printing by separating the color components of an image - cyan, magenta, yellow and black – which when combined reproduces full color images
Printing and reproduction of full color images using the four process printing colors - yellow, cyan, magenta, and black - to create an image with an indefinite number of colors.
process by which the subtractive primaries (yellow, magenta, cyan and black) combine to reproduce fullcolor artwork and designs.
The process of printing that uses dot patterns of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black (CMYK). When these colors are overprinted, they combine to render a wide range of colors. When observed up close, the individual dots are visible. However, the color and shape of the image appear continuous when viewed from a distance.
A printing method that involves separating full-color images into four different halftones - cyan, magenta, yellow, and black- to print and reproduce full color images with infinite number of colors. The optical blending of these colored dots recreates a continuous tone image.
Method of printing based on the separation of images into the 4 primary colors of cyan, magenta, yellow and black which when combined reproduce a full color spectrum; also known as full color process