To control the output of color imaging devices, the following color spaces are normally used:
●RGB (Red, Green and Blue) is the color space typically used for additive devices. A color is represented as a combination of specific quantities of red, green and blue colorants and all such combinations address the range of colors (color gamut) of the chosen device.
NOTE: Subtractive devices can also be controlled using RGB data and, especially when you do not require control over how you want to use your printer’s black ink, this is an efficient option.
●CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black) is the color space for subtractive devices, such as printers or presses. A color is represented as a combination of cyan, magenta, yellow and black
(K) inks and all such combinations let you address the entire range of colors of the chosen device.
Both of these color spaces are only ways of controlling different color imaging devices and their values do not describe colors directly. The same CMYK values, for example, will give different colors when sent to different printers that use different inks and paper types. For example, consider a printer that can use indoor inks or outdoor inks. The printer (hardware) is the same, but it has two different color gamuts due to the different chemistry of the inks
The same happens with
NOTE: The white point is the brightest neutral color that a device can reproduce or that is present in an image. The human visual system automatically adapts to the content of an image with respect to its white point.
Furthermore, an RGB image, such as an image obtained from a digital camera and edited on a monitor, needs to be first converted to CMYK for a specific printer before printing. Unfortunately different devices do not give access to the same color gamuts: there are some colors that can be shown on a display that cannot be matched in print and vice versa. The following graphic illustrates how colors visible to the human eye are greater than those reproduced by a typical display or printer using a specific paper type and also how the color gamuts accessible using these two color imaging devices do not match each other.
Color management
ENWW | The problem: color in the computer world 61 |