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Printing transparency gradient in CMYK

New Here ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

Hi

Firstly i apologise as i'm sure CMYK issues have been well and truely covered in previous forums. However i was wondering if i could get some help with my specific issue.

My CMYK problem is concerning a blue gradient which gradually reduces to complete transparency. I have found that when converting to CMYK this tends to wash out the image when the blue transparency is low.

I understand that when converting to CMYK from RGB not all colours/effects will be translated properly. However i was just wondering if there is a way for me to improve the outcome. Is there any techniques which i can use to reduce the issue?(either effecting the gradient itself or the image behind it?)

I have uploaded 2 images to show my issue. The first is how i want the cover to look like (this is in RGB) and the second is when converted to CMYK.

Thank you for your help!

Regards

Matt

reinsurance brochure (RGB).jpg

reinsurance brochure (CMYK).jpg

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Community Expert ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

Have you tried doing the gradient on top of the photo in Photoshop?

Also, have you checked your color profiles, your color management settings in the CC programs?

(Use Adobe Bridge to set the color management settings in multiple programs at once; make sure any documents are closed.)

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Guide ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

Actually, the best way is to do this in Photoshop and place the image as a raster background.

Photoshop works with such things much better.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

Don't make the conversion in Photshop or if you do, flatten before converting. You can place the layered RGB file and make the conversion when you export to PDF. See my PS post:

Printing transparency gradients in CMYK

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Community Expert ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

This is a good example of an advantage of placing RGB and handing the conversion on export or print. When you export to PDF the layered Photoshop image gets flattened before the conversion.

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Participant ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

I disagree with almost every comment on here... almost. Photoshop will handle this better, but there is no need to flatten. Prep the image in psd, in CMYK layers, leave it in layers and place the psd in indesign.  Ditch the whole RGB part of the process, leave nothing to convert.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018

I disagree with almost every comment on here... almost. Photoshop will handle this better, but there is no need to flatten. Prep the image in psd, in CMYK layers, leave it in layers and place the psd in indesign.

There are problems building blended layers from scratch in CMYK either PS or ID. The most dangerous being the CMYK profile doesn't prevent you from exceeding the profile's total ink limit when you are in CMYK mode and the blending modes are applied, but in RGB mode the profile's total ink and black generation will be correctly handled on the conversion to CMYK. Also working in RGB mode lets you make the conversion to the correct press profile without committing to a single device dependent CMYK space.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 24, 2018 Apr 24, 2018
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