Colour Guide

Colours in Print

The basis of all print is colour on a specific stock! from a single colour black on 400gsm white uncoated paper Business Card to a full colour vibrant Advertising board on 5mm foamex.
Lets run through some of the colour modes and see what is required for best results for printing, and also some tips on how to convert your colours for the correct output.

guide to colour in print

CMYK

CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black (the K refers to key which is ‘key colour’ or black!) this is the most widely used method for printing and the one we use at Better Printing on both our Offset Litho and Digital presses.
This method is also referred to as ‘four’ or ‘full ‘colour process and involves using the four colours in various mixes to create and reproduce the full colour palette required for all print jobs.
While CMYK printing does an incredible job on most colours there are times when it is limited in its reliability and for strict brand guidelines you may need to use a Pantone colour.

 

Pantone Colours

The Pantone Matching System (PMS) use numbers to identify specific colours, the system uses a strict mixture of pigments to create the ‘spot’ colours that are then used for single colour inks.
The Pantone system has many special specific categories it can produce, such as metallics, fluorescents (neons) and pastels.
We have a five colour press so we can run a CMYK job with a 5th Pantone colour as well at the same time. If additional colours are needed they can be ran through the press again, alternatively up to 5 Pantone colours could be run on their own.

 

RGB

RGB stands for Red, Green and Blue and is an additive colour mode that is used for screen displays such as Televisions projectors and of course computer screens!.
We cannot print in RGB so there has to be a conversion to CMYK, this has traditionally been problematic as the conversion results can be unpredictable, and something that looks full and vibrant on screen due to the interaction of light can, look dull and washed out on paper sometimes.
Modern RIPS (raster image processors) however are now very good at converting between colour modes, particularly with photographic images.

CMYK Colour

Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

2645 Pantone swatch

Pantone Matching System

RGB colour wheel

Red, Blue and Green

Colour Conversions

For best results, before submitting your artwork, ensure your design is saved in CMYK colour mode, this includes all photos and graphic elements.
Any items saved in RGB mode (red, green, blue; the colour mode for digital displays and web images) may show colour discrepancies after they have been printed by our CMYK printers.

To avoid any nasty surprises, it is best to convert any RGB artwork to CMYK. Just select File > Document Colour Mode > CMYK in Illustrator or Image > Mode > CMYK Colour in Photoshop and Save. If saving as a PDF, review the Save Adobe PDF dialog box and check that Colour Conversion in the Output tab is set to No Conversion.
If you’re working in InDesign, you can convert any RGB images within your design by saving as a PDF and selecting the Press Quality PDF preset in the Save Adobe PDf dialog – then in the Output tab, select Convert to Destination (Preserve Numbers) and select a CMYK profile.

If you are unsure about colour or have any questions then call us on 023 8087 8037 or email us.

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