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Why do some printers print RGB and some CMYK if all printers are CMYK..?

New Here ,
Mar 14, 2019 Mar 14, 2019

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Hi!

I'm currently extremely frustrated with printing services online that convert files to CMYK for their prints.
Such as banners, business cards and special prints such as Holographic prints.

If I understand it correctly, all printers print in CMYK. But how come my Canon Pro-300 prints my RGB files perfectly to where they look identical to what I see on screen, vibrant, saturated, glowing.. where as 3rd party printing services generally come out looking as if I changed my RGB file to CMYK in photoshop. Flat, desaturated, washed out and generally trash.

If ALL printers print in CMYK, how can I adjust my images at home so that what I get from 3rd party printers is as good as my home prints?

The CMYK colorspace is horribly limited and no amount of adjustment layers will make it look as vibrant as the RGB file yet my printer can print the RGB file perfectly.

Please bestow your wisdom upon this confused noob.

Thank you for your time.

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Print and prepress

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

To answer your original question and reconcile that with the other good responses on this thread:

 

In fact, there are no RGB printers. You either have a printer with CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) inks or a printer, typically higher end inkjet devices, that has additional colorants (often either orange and green or light cyan, light magenta, and gray) to allow gamut expansion when converting from RGB colors.

 

On your home computer, whether MacOS or Windows, unless your printer is eith

...

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LEGEND ,
Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

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Not all printers use the four inks cyan, magenta, yellow, black. Some use more inks to get a wider range of colours. Even with four colours the actual inks vary in colour. Still, CMYK usually washes out colour.

But Canon say on their site...

Professional A3 Photo Printers

Take complete creative control of your images with the PIXMA professional photo printers consistently delivering the results your images deserve. With the 8, 10 or 12 ink systems

That’s sure not CMYK.

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Community Expert ,
Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

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https://forums.adobe.com/people/Test+Screen+Name  wrote

(...) With the 8, 10 or 12 ink systems

That’s sure not CMYK.

Not CMYK and not RGB but more like CMYK+other colours.

Anyhow you print, there is a lot that needs to happen in the background to map the correct colour to the printed pixel.

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer

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LEGEND ,
Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

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Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

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To answer your original question and reconcile that with the other good responses on this thread:

 

In fact, there are no RGB printers. You either have a printer with CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) inks or a printer, typically higher end inkjet devices, that has additional colorants (often either orange and green or light cyan, light magenta, and gray) to allow gamut expansion when converting from RGB colors.

 

On your home computer, whether MacOS or Windows, unless your printer is either a PostScript or a direct PDF printing device, the print drivers use an RGB printing model. This has some interesting ramifications.

 

If you print from Adobe Acrobat or Reader to a PostScript printer, you will get colormetrically-correct RGB to CMYK conversions that often seem “dull” compared to the colors you see on-screen which are quite frankly, out of gamut for a CMYK printer.

 

If you have a typical low-end home color printer, whether toner or inkjet based, there still are only CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) inks. Depending upon the print driver's settings, many print drivers will not do a simply ICC profile-based RGB to CMYK conversion, but rather, use “secret sauce techniques” to try to punch up the colors, especially what one may describe as “office colors” such as the bright colors that you may typically see in a PowerPoint presentation or Excel spreadsheet. What is printed is not colormetrically correct, but rather, “pleasing” and not the “dull” colors you would get from a colormetrically-correct ICC profile-driven RGB to CMYK conversion.

 

If your home color printer is a “photo printer” with additional colorants, your printer driver is likely taking advantage of those additional colorants when converting from RGB to CMYK + the additional colorants to expand the gamut and give you colors that really “pop.”

 

In terms of what you do when you go for commercial printing, there are a few issues:

 

(1)     If you provide the commercial printer with a CMYK-only PDF file, you are getting exactly what you should expect even if the commercial printer has a device with additional colorants. You have already eliminated the possibility of expanded gamut by the conversions to CMYK.

 

(2)     If you provide the commercial printer with a PDF/X-4 file, for example, in which the RGB colorants (such as for images or RGB-based vector items) are maintained in RGB with their ICC profiles and the printer has devices with more than CMYK colorants (quite often the case for wide-format banners, signs, and specialty items), then you should not be seeing this problem assuming that the commercial printer knows that you need this expanded gamut.

 

(3)     For business cards, for example, most printers will use a CMYK device. If you have special needs, you need to advise your printer of such needs and expect to pay higher prices for printing on devices that have extra colorants to expand gamut!

 

Remember that you can preview what your PDF file will look like in Acrobat with the Output Preview feature as well as the Overprint Preview option (under Display Preferences).

 

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)

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New Here ,
Mar 15, 2019 Mar 15, 2019

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Thank you! This explained everything!

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New Here ,
Mar 22, 2019 Mar 22, 2019

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Haha, I have the exact same frustration. 

Is there any way that professional print companies print colors (using any method) that are as vibrant as the RGB colors I see on my MacBook Pro screen? 

I, too, designed a business card with vivid colors, only to run into this limitation.  Can't believe the entire world putting up with this, given the advanced technologies everywhere in our world...

Haha, I'm obviously a newbie to this!

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LEGEND ,
Mar 23, 2019 Mar 23, 2019

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Yes, there are technologies that professional printers can use, which use more than 4 inks. This is much more expensive  but by and large, yes, more than 99% of professional colour printing uses CMYK. Designers just Have to know this and expect it.

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Community Expert ,
Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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to add to this: designers work around this by using specific Pantone colours.

Until now, I haven’t seen a professional printer using more than CMYK + Pantone for volume work.

Specialized service provider are offering print sevices mainly for photographers, but that are as said, expensive services and they do not do volume work.

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer

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Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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Abambo  wrote

 

to add to this: designers work around this by using specific Pantone colours.

 

Until now, I haven’t seen a professional printer using more than CMYK + Pantone for volume work.

 

Specialized service provider are offering print sevices mainly for photographers, but that are as said, expensive services and they do not do volume work.

Au contraire, mon ami …   

 

Quite a bit of commercial printing, not just photographic printing, is done with process CMYK + one, two, or even three spot colors, especially when dealing with packaging and much printing associated with corporate branding (think Coca Cola red, Pepsi Cola blue, Kodak yellow, etc.) Of course this is “volume work.”

 

With regards to use of “specific Pantone colours,” one must distinguish between Pantone spot colors and Pantone “spot colors” such as those provided in Adobe applications as PANTONE+ Pastels & Neons, PANTONE+ Metalllics, PANTONE+ Premium Metallics, and PANTONE+ Solid (coated and uncoated versions) versus PANTONE+ CMYK and PANTONE+ Color Bridge swatch collections.

 

The former group are spot colors designed to be printed with inks exactly matching the specified colors. These colors are specified as spot colors with Lab, device independent alternate color definitions. A large percentage of these colors (but not all of them) are way “out of gamut” for process CMYK printing – be exceptionally careful in choosing any of these colors if you plan to use only process CMYK printing. It is not the responsibility of your print service provider to do this for you. If you do use these colors for artwork printed with process CMYK printing, be sure to set options when exporting PDF via the Ink Manager to treat these as non-spot colors in which case the Lab alternates will be used in the PDF file. (This is critically important if transparency is involved!)

 

The latter group of Pantone swatches are designed for selecting colors to be printed using only process CMYK. You obviously won't find those wild, out-of-gamut colors in these swatches, but they are generally safe for use with process CMYK printing. What you do need to be careful of is that the CMYK values of these swatches are DeviceCMYK, are not color managed (no designation as to which CMYK color space the colors were designed for, and can differ in final appearance depending upon the CMYK characterization of the print process used.

 

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)

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Community Expert ,
Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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I  saw printers printing more than CMYK. But they added spot colours, special colours for special designs. You can add for sure as much spot colours as you want in a way that you get what you pay for. For sure those are volume jobs and you can print colours outside of the CMYK gamut with that.

However,  I never saw a printer taking my wide gamut RGB files and separating that into something more complex that CMYK. Only exception are the photo printers taking the RGB stream and separating that according to their colour mix into more vivid colours than CMYK. I’ve not seen such a printer hower, for volume work. I know that Artbooks may get special attention, but I never took care to dig into that.

So I use spot colours for special colours like logo colours in high quality prints and for colours outside of the gamut (e.g. silver or gold)

However, screens that we have now on iPads pose a problem as they are tuned to provide a visually pleasant experience by showing vivid and saturated colours that are very difficult to get in print. If I can, I avoid showing my designs on iPads. The final print result disappoints people.

This said, I never tried to calibrate my iPad and I even do not know if it is possible,

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer

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Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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Abambo  wrote

I  saw printers printing more than CMYK. But they added spot colours, special colours for special designs. You can add for sure as much spot colours as you want in a way that you get what you pay for. For sure those are volume jobs and you can print colours outside of the CMYK gamut with that.

However,  I never saw a printer taking my wide gamut RGB files and separating that into something more complex that CMYK. Only exception are the photo printers taking the RGB stream and separating that according to their colour mix into more vivid colours than CMYK. I’ve not seen such a printer hower, for volume work. I know that Artbooks may get special attention, but I never took care to dig into that.…

Absolutely correct! Unless you specify use of extra colorants, either spot colors with either with Pantone (or custom formulations) or for special colorants for gamut expansion, I know of no print service provider that will automatically attempt to expand the gamut for normal print jobs. It is a significant extra expense both for ink and setup that you should expect to be charged extra for if you so request such service. The only exception might be print service providers that offer special “photo printing services” that explicitly advertise support for wide gamut printing (which does ICC-tagged RGB to n-color conversion as part of their print process) for which the price includes the n-color printing..

Abambo  wrote

… So I use spot colours for special colours like logo colours in high quality prints and for colours outside of the gamut (e.g. silver or gold) …

Which is exactly what those spot colors are designed for! 

Abambo  wrote

… However, screens that we have now on iPads pose a problem as they are tuned to provide a visually pleasant experience by showing vivid and saturated colours that are very difficult to get in print. If I can, I avoid showing my designs on iPads. The final print result disappoints people.

This said, I never tried to calibrate my iPad and I even do not know if it is possible,

Amen to that, brother. The biggest complaint that I here from professionals is that you can't really make any real assumptions about color on either iOS or Android devices. The newer iOS device make some effort at ICC color management support, but application support is “iffy” at best. You certainly have no official way of color-calibrating them.

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)

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Community Beginner ,
Nov 29, 2023 Nov 29, 2023

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LATEST

GREETINGS FROM THE FUTURE! Watch out for 2020... it's a lulu!!! 😄
NOTE: I am typing this out on the fly during my lunch hour with a soup and a sandwich and when they are done, I'm gone. Therefore there are BOUND to be inaccuracies in my descriptions. There is SO MUCH MORE to this and colour management in general!!! Google the word "Metamerism" and go down another rabbit hole!!!
RGB, by it's very nature, is an "additive" process. It uses Red Green and Blue LIGHTS to make various colours. Do you remember your elementary school class on colour where those three colours are combined to make a white light? THAT! (This is SLIGHTLY different in that the screen is composed of those dots rather than mixing the colours but stay with me.) You can't PRINT those colours... it just makes a dark mud.
INKJET PRINTERS use CMY, Cyan, Magenta and Yellow... these are SUBTRACTIVE colours because they FILTER OUT (subtract) the colours that are shone on the printed page and allow the last, third colour to reflect to the eye. the "K" in CMYK is black and is included because printing chemistry is NEVER perfect and adding black is the first TWEAK that they invented for the process colour printing system. WHITE is the absense of any printed ink.
NONE of what I say is perfect because PRINTING IS NOT PERFECT. Because of this imperfection if you actually MIXED the colours in an inkjet printer you'd get a chemical mess of colour and so the printer actually uses "PROCESS" colours where the dots are printed SIDE-BY-SIDE and relies on the brain to combine them into colours. (simplistic description!)
Again... the basic CMY(K) is how colour is PRINTED... you can't print RGB.
IF YOU PRINT ON AN OFFSET PRESS then you can include SOLID colour inks... where the ink that is chosen for a GRAPHIC is a specialized colour... the same as if you mixed paint for your livingroom walls. BUT THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE for an inkjet printer. THE NEXT BEST THING is to increase your colour "gamut" (the scope of colours that your printer can print and your eye can see) by adding "light cyan", "light magenta", orange, green, red... WAIT!!! WHAT?????
How can green and red be included if an RGB printer doesn't exist????

Welp... they aren't ADDITIVE in this situation... they are expanded gamut PROCESS colours and the dots, again, are printed SIDE-BY-SIDE!! (Here's where lighting and that "Metamerism" really messes with yer brain!!)
Your monitor has one colour profile, EACH AND EVERY PRINTING DEVICE has their OWN printing profile and there is a WORKING SPACE profile that is held in the computer program and storage file and allows for much larger theoretical gamuts when the output device is not known.
NOW... The Canon Pixma Pro-300 has 9 colours C,M,Y,K,grey, light C, Light M, red and photo black (I think I remember correctly) It is ONE OF THE BEST PHOTO PRINTERS OUT THERE!!! YOU CAN'T DO BETTER!!

So if a large-format/wide-format printer has photo colour quality it MAY STILL not have THAT many colours. They MAY only have CMYK, light C and Light M.
TRADITIONALLY business cards are printed on an offset press NOT a digital printer. They may use ONE colour ink... TWO colours of ink, FOUR colours of ink or MORE colours INCLUDING custom SOLID Pantone colours.
HOWEVER, in this day n age MOST business cards are printed on DIGITAL CMYK Toner-based PHOTOCOPIER type printers... NOT offset ink presses and certainly not inkjet. And they JUST HAVE CMYK... that's it. The gamut is horribly small!!! And many of the colours are muddy!
Whatever you are expecting you need to SIT DOWN with a printer, ask what they use in their back rooms and DO NOT HAVE BIG EXPECTATIONS!!!

Big city centers MAY have more possibilites BUT I'M IN THE DETROIT AREA and we will disappoint you!! 😉

Small towns certainly WILL ABSOLUTELY disappoint you!!!
Professional photographers, who are really serious, have their own photo printers or REALLY SEARCH OUT photo able printing businesses!
Gotta go back... I'm LATE for work!!!!

 

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LEGEND ,
Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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A few years ago Pantone's Hexachrome technology was the way forward. Six ink printing, with Pantone software to convert RGB to the six channels needed to print. Nice results. I wonder what happened to it.

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Mar 24, 2019 Mar 24, 2019

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Pantone's business model has changed dramatically since the early 2000's when Hexachrome was actively marketed by Pantone. Pantone no longer sells inks, but rather the formulations and definitions. Hexachrome was Pantone's process for expanded gamut printing using special orange and green inks to expand the gamut beyond the colors supported by process CMYK. In order to use it, you needed to do special file preparation with Pantone software to yield additional explicit O and G channels. Typically this Hexachrome preparation was done in Photoshop with a Pantone plug-in. I believe that Pantone dropped the Hexachrome system as ICC color management became more mainstream and most major printer vendors were providing means of extending gamut with use of extra inks in conjunction with ICC color management being employed to convert wide gamut RGB colors at RIP time.

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)

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New Here ,
Sep 28, 2022 Sep 28, 2022

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Wowww. This is some invaluable info for a newbie like me! I've been doing this on and off for 7 years and I still never fully understood what the deal was with the RGB to CMYK colour conversion even though we were taught this breifly in university. 

 

Do you have any thoughts on which RGB colour setting to select on output for PDF/X? I've always just gone with the default sRGB IEC 2.1 because I simply have no idea how it will affect the printing process on a CMYK printer. 

 

I'm currently trying to print a neon glow effect typeface as a test for customers who will either print domestically or take to local commercial printers. I want to give them the best advice on how to print at home and/or how to communicate what is needed to their commercial printers which is how I ended up here.

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New Here ,
Sep 07, 2022 Sep 07, 2022

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Maybe because they don't give a shite about your files. They hire students who just hit the 'PRINT' button.

 

I went shopping for a compact-camera and this camerashop also did printing.

Ipicked up a few examples of prints laying around in that shop. Terrible washed colors. I could not believe anyone hands their digital stills in like that.

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