Telling The Difference Between RGB And CMYK In Color Mixing

By Maryl Joop


Many artists are looking for good ways to reproduce their paintings without resorting to (a) repainting it, and (b) paying someone else to reproduce it for you. Repainting would be too time consuming and incredibly difficult to reproduce exactly.

If you don't do that, all your colors will skew and you have no idea why. If you print on paper then you've heard that the reverse is true.

You are to only work in CMYK. Should you step off the beaten path, you'll find your print jobs looking nothing like what you designed on your screen.

Some of these positions include web designers, art directors, layout artists, photo editors, illustrators, logo designers and multimedia designers. Web designers especially are in high demand within the business industry and the outlook for those who have an education and specialization in Web design looks very promising.

RGB is an additive color mixture for light mediums. What this means is that for any medium in which we are emitting light onto a display-i.e. TV, computer screen, cell phone, etc.-the red, green and blue will be mixed together.

The larger the sensor, the more light it lets in. Good photography needs the right amount of light to capture the details. Your painting needs a large sensor to capture its brilliance. A camera from a smart phone typically has a sensor with the circumference of half a pencil eraser. That's not enough to capture the detail you're looking for to reprint it or post it on your website and blog.

An SLR has a significantly bigger sensor that captures the important details with a lot of megapixels to compliment it. Then you ask about the point and shoots (those pocket-sized cameras). Aren't they good enough? On the sensor side, they are still significantly smaller than the SLR. It can't let in the maximum amount of light.

Instead of adding together to add brilliance, they degenerate into lower color forms that are darker and colder. This is why CMYK is called a subtractive color. Cyan, magenta and yellow are the most complicated basic three colors. In light, they are just one step away from white. When you combine them, they can form nearly any color by slowly deconstructing in controlled ways. Combining all three of these colors does not make black however.

Black was added to the mix because no matter how much you mix cyan, magenta and yellow, they just simply won't create a true black. You will make a few darker, dirty browns that can be useful.

A quick turnover in available positions means that there will be a sizable number of graphic art jobs available to those talented and dedicated individuals who desire to make graphic arts their profession.




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