A method of printing where four colors of ink (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) are used to print tiny dots that collectively make a color in your illustration. All process colors are created by overlaying tints of various percentages of the four process color inks. Hexachrome uses orange and green process colors in addition to the CMYK used in traditional four-color processing.
The primary colors used in 4-color printing: cyan, magenta, yellow and black. These can be adjusted for color, unlike PMS colors which come pre-mixed.
The printing of two or more half-tone plates to produce intermediate colors and shades. Process 4/color printing is "full-color" printing used to reproduce colored photographs and paintings. An example of 2/color process printing would be using yellow and blue to produce various shades of green.
Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and black - the primary colors used in four-color process printing. Process inks are transparent.
In printing, it is the process of applying or separating the three secondary subtractive colors or Cyan, Magenta, Yellow (and black for detail) in any combination in order to simulate all colors in the visual spectrum.
Color reproduced on a printing press using mixtures of various amounts of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black inks. Colors which are broken down into their CMYK primaries are called "process" colors; contrast SPOT colors.
The colors of process Cyan, process Magenta, process Yellow, and Black used in four-color process printing to simulate all of the colors as the human eye sees them. Also known as four-color process. When these colors are used in various strengths and combinations, they make it possible to produce thousands of colors with a minimum of photography, platemaking, and presswork. to top
Color created by the subtractive primaries, yellow, cyan, magenta and black inks in order to create the appearance of the a full-spectrum of colors. Often refered to as "four- color process".
The combination of four standard inks used by printers to reproduce color images. These inks - cyan, magenta, yellow, and black - combine in various densities to allow white light reflecting off white paper to be perceived by the eye in a wide range of colors. This system is referred to as CMYK color, and is different from RGB color (red, green, blue), which is used in computer monitors.
Process color is using cyan, magenta, yellow, and black in various combinations to create all other colors.
The printing process that uses just four colors to simulate many colors. The four process colors are cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK).
One of the four standard colors used to produce full-color photos and artwork: cyan (blue), magenta (red), yellow or black.
Printing system using CMYK (or sometimes more) to produce color.
Inks that are used to print an image from four separate plates, one each for Cyan (C), Magenta (M), Yellow (Y), and Black (K). In combination, they produce an illusion of an even wider range of colors.
Colors that are made up of the CMYK. By using halftones, you can obtain photographic full color images using just CMYK. Also known as Full Color.
Process color uses the four industry-standard, transparent colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (CMYK). When screened in specified percentages and overlapped, these colors can combine to create an equivalent of the logo color.
Commonly used in offset printing, Process Printing uses the four pigment colors of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black - called CMYK. On garments, many "simple" process jobs are actually more than four colors. Designs with lots of specific color matches and heavy text need separate "spot colors." If the shirt is a light or pastel color, white is also needed. Good process color is much more difficult to do than normal spot colors.
A method of printing colors in which the printer uses four colors of ink, cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK) to create all of the colors in the publication. This method can reproduce the widest range of colors with the fewest number of inks when printing.
Using Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black inks to create life-like 4-color picture
The four color pigments cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (CMYK) used in color printing.
The combination of different concentrations of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black ink to produce an image.
One of the four colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) that is used in producing full-color images, such as color photographs.
A means to produce color output that contains many colors and/ or many variations of color tones using only four colors--cyan, magenta, yellow, and black.
Any one of the three subtractive primary colors (cyan, magenta, or yellow) or black. Process color may also refer to the technique of creating full color images by blending percentages of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks (CMYK).
A printed color or image that is rendered by a combination of three primary colors. In theory, all colors of the spectrum can be reproduced by combining different amounts of three primary colors. The three primary colors in the subtractive system are cyan, magenta, and yellow. Because of paper defects, show through and variations in illuminating light, it is very difficult in practice to have a complete color gamut from the three primaries. Additionally, to make black by combining the three primaries is very expensive because it utilizes so much ink. Therefore, black is frequently added as a fourth ink component. This process is called under-cutting.
The three primary colors of printing - yellow, magenta (red) and cyan (blue) - plus black. When printed as halftone in that order, they create a full range of natural colors. This type of printing is also known as four-color process printing.
The mechanical process of reproducing a full color image with the three primary subtractive color inks (CMYK/ Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black) and black. When viewed under a lupe, the individual color halftone dots can be seen in a process color image.[go to top
The method of applying color to a printed project that uses only four (4) inks to depict all colors. The four colors are Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black. This process is also known as CMYK color.
Cyan, magenta, yellow and black, combined in a matching system to recreate thousand of colors in offset and direct digital printing. The three colors (cyan, magenta and yellow) plus black that are used in full color printing.
A color made up of varying amounts of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (the four colors used in commercial offset printing and referred to as the Subtractive Color Model) dots that overlap to create the illusion of a large number of different colors.
Four-color printing; used for four-color color printing process, composed of percentages of cyan, magenta, yellow and black, which creates a full-color look
The colors used for four-color process printing: yellow, magenta, cyan and black.
Four-color reproduction of the full range of colors by the use of four printing plates, one for each of the primary colors: cyan (process blue), magenta (process red), yellow, and black.
A four-color printing process using separate color plates to re-create a full-color advertising image.
any of the three subtractive primary colors- yellow, magenta, and cyan- that are used in combination with one another to reproduce the entire visible spectrum.
Cyan, magenta, yellow and black combined to create a new color.
The printing primary colors: cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK), used in full-colour process printing
The process colors (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black) are used in traditional color printing to reproduce a full color range.
Process color is a common shortened form of the term "four-color printing process." Process color (and similar terms) refers both to a method of reproducing colored images on printing presses and to the specific printed colors that result from that method. Other ways of referring to this printing process include "four color," "CMYK," "full process" and "full color."