Colors & Psychology
October 19, 2010 at 4:10 pm | Posted in Colors, Colour Management, Desktop Publishing | Leave a commentTags: color expectations, Colors & Psychology, feelings, individual perception, perception of colors
When people think of color, they tend to envision physical objects, like green grass, a black car, or a blue sky. What you interpret as “color” is actually the result of absorbed and reflected light waves, which stimulate sensors in your eye and trigger associations in your brain. Three physical factors influence the appearance of a given color: the light source, the surrounding information, and even your eyes.
The human eye can detect an amazing range of light energy, but what happens to it from there is a matter of psychology, and not necessarily color science. Color represents a strong part of our emotional association fields, a sort of resonant touchstone to which we tie ideas and subconscious feelings. Studies have shown that a person’s overall mood and perception of events can be influenced by the colors of their surroundings. Continue Reading Colors & Psychology…
Spot Colors – Process Colors
November 3, 2009 at 4:24 pm | Posted in Colors, Printing specs | 1 CommentTags: Colors, Printing specs, Process Colors, Spot Colors
A spot color is a special already mixed ink using in printing. Spot color inks come in a various of colors, including some special inks such as metallic and fluorescent. Unlike CMYK (or process color) which creates colors by mixing 4 specific inks (cyan, magenta, yellow, black), spot colors are already mixed and you use one ink for each color in the print.
There are different brands of spot color inks but the most known spot color printing system is PANTONE. Continue Reading Spot Colors – Process Colors…
My printer wants the file set on CMYK
June 19, 2009 at 3:15 pm | Posted in Colors | Leave a commentTags: Color space, printing
CMYK is a color profile used in printing, printers use 4 colors to print: cyan, magenta, yellow and black . All the other colors result from the combination of different values of these 4 colors. For example 100% magenta+100% yellow = red.
Colors are represented by values from 0% that is no color up to 100% that is the maximum saturation of that color. Continue Reading My printer wants the file set on CMYK…
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