Fw: Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-23 Thread Tony Sleep
@[192.9.219.74] From: "Rob Geraghty" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] MIME-Version: 1.0 Importance: Normal Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-UIDL: 7fb631d67f8fb1c4712d868bd7f2d1d7 Subj

Fw: Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-20 Thread Tony Sleep
PROTECTED] Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed" X-UIDL: ebbc9c0cf4c00a54a935285487b7ba52 Subject: Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication I seem to have stirred up a bit of a hornet's nest here - all to the good, I'm sure. Thanks to everyone for the

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-19 Thread jeremy spence
, and the use of spot colour processes which most normal print processes can't match. From: [EMAIL PROTECTED](Tony Sleep) Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2000 01:10 +0100 (BST) To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication Cadmus states over and over again

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-19 Thread Laura Mitchell
This leads me to something I've been wondering (and I'm gonig to ask this on Usenet as well) - do the colours shown on the screen after converting an image to CMYK in PSP or PS really reflect the way it will look when printed? Monitors can vary quite a bit - and even something as simple as

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-18 Thread Laura Mitchell
There is a shift in Photoshop when converting from RGB to CMYK, deep blue colors tend to go purple from what I've seen. I don't know about 'separating correctly' but I would want to send something in CMYK and take care of color shift correction myself than send it in RGB and hope that the

RE: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-18 Thread Rob Geraghty
Roger wrote: on-line digital art information site: (http://cjs.cadmus.com/da/). Cadmus states over and over again that RGB files CANNOT BE SEPARATED CORRECTLY and WILL NOT PRINT PROPERLY, and only CMYK files are acceptable. It may have something to do with the XyVision page composition system

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-18 Thread Tony Sleep
Cadmus states over and over again that RGB files CANNOT BE SEPARATED CORRECTLY and WILL NOT PRINT PROPERLY, and only CMYK files are acceptable. It may have something to do with the XyVision page composition system they use. What they are saying is exactly that : they don't have the

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-18 Thread Sean Harding
On Wed Oct 18 at 05:05:43 PM, Roger Smith wrote: Cadmus states over and over again that RGB files CANNOT BE SEPARATED CORRECTLY and WILL NOT PRINT PROPERLY, and only CMYK files are That's always been true. It's just a matter of whether you're converting from RGB to CMYK before you send it

Re: CMYK vs RGB for publication

2000-10-18 Thread Rob Geraghty
Tony wrote: 'You must supply CMYK' = 'we aren't going to buy a Mac and PS and learn how to use them, even if it means the client gets a worse print job'. This leads me to something I've been wondering (and I'm gonig to ask this on Usenet as well) - do the colours shown on the screen after