Managing process and spot colors – Adobe Illustrator CS4 User Manual

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USING ADOBE ILLUSTRATOR CS4

Color management

Change the appearance of CMYK black (Illustrator, InDesign)

Pure CMYK black (K=100) appears jet black (or rich black) when viewed on-screen, printed to a non-PostScript
desktop printer, or exported to an RGB file format. If you prefer to see the difference between pure black and rich black
as it will appear when printed on a commercial press, you can change the Appearance Of Black preferences. These
preferences do not change the color values in a document.

1

Choose Edit > Preferences

> Appearance Of Black (Windows) or [application name] > Preferences

> Appearance

Of Black (Mac

OS).

2

Choose an option for On Screen:

Display All Blacks Accurately

Displays pure CMYK black as dark gray. This setting allows you to see the difference

between pure black and rich black.

Display All Blacks As Rich Black

Displays pure CMYK black as jet black (RGB=000). This setting makes pure black and

rich black appear the same on-screen.

3

Choose an option for Printing/Exporting:

Output All Blacks Accurately

When printing to a non-PostScript desktop printer or exporting to an RGB file format,

outputs pure CMYK black using the color numbers in the document. This setting allows you to see the difference
between pure black and rich black.

Output All Blacks As Rich Black

When printing to a non-PostScript desktop printer or exporting to an RGB file format,

outputs pure CMYK black as jet black (RGB=000). This setting makes pure black and rich black appear the same.

Managing process and spot colors

When color management is on, any color you apply or create within a color-managed Adobe application automatically
uses a color profile that corresponds to the document. If you switch color modes, the color management system uses
the appropriate profiles to translate the color to the new color model you choose.

Keep in mind the following guidelines for working with process and spot colors:

Choose a CMYK working space that matches your CMYK output conditions to ensure that you can accurately
define and view process colors.

Select colors from a color library. Adobe applications come with several standard color libraries, which you can load
using the Swatches panel menu.

(Illustrator, and InDesign) Turn on Overprint Preview to get an accurate and consistent preview of spot colors.

(Acrobat, Illustrator, and InDesign) Use Lab values (the default) to display predefined spot colors (such as colors
from the TOYO, PANTONE, DIC, and HKS libraries) and convert these colors to process colors. Using Lab values
provides the greatest accuracy and guarantees the consistent display of colors across Creative Suite applications. If
you want the display and output of these colors to match earlier versions of Illustrator or InDesign, use CMYK
equivalent values instead. For instructions on switching between Lab values and CMYK values for spot colors,
search Illustrator or InDesign Help.

Note: Color-managing spot colors provides a close approximation of a spot color on your proofing device and monitor.
However, it is difficult to exactly reproduce a spot color on a monitor or proofing device because many spot color inks exist
outside the gamuts of many of those devices.

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