Colour printing with cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks.
The process of producing multi-coloured maps, diagrams, or pictures by printing with a set of matched inks - cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK). Other colours are obtained by combining two or three of these colours using dot or half-tone screens (CMY).
Also known as CMYK. (See CMYK)
The reproduction of full-colour artwork through the combination of four process ink colours – magenta (red), cyan (blue), yellow and black – in specified intensities.
in printing, the combination of the four primary subtractive colours (CMYK – cyan, magenta, yellow and black) to create the effect of the full spectrum of colours.
A method of printing that uses dots of cyan, magenta, yellow and black (see: CMYK) to recreate the continuous tones and variety of colours in a colour image.
Printing with yellow, magenta and cyan colour inks plus black, using screens to create all other colours.
Colour printing using the three primary colours (cyan, magenta and yellow) plus black.
Reproduction of full-colour photographs or art with the four basic colours of ink (cyan, magenta, yellow, black).
A process of printing coloured illustrations or photos, in which the artwork has first been separated into its primary printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow and black.
This is the process in which the four basic ink colours (e.g. yellow, magenta, cyan, black) are combined to reproduce full-colour photography or artwork.
Colour printing by means of the three subtractive primary colours (yellows, magenta, cyan) and black superimposed; the colours of the original having been separated by a photographic or electronic process.
A method that uses dots of magenta (red), cyan (blue), yellow, and black to simulate the continuous tones and variety of colors in a colour image. Each halftone separation is printed with its process colour (magenta, cyan, yellow, and black). When we look at the final result, our eyes blend the dots to recreate the continuous tones and variety of colors we see in a colour photograph, painting, or drawing. see also dots per inch and halftone
A printing process that uses a layering of four primary ink colours (cyan, magenta, yellow and black) to reproduce colour images.
The use of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black dots to simulate a wide variety of colours.
reproduction of full-colour photographs or art with the four basic colours of ink (yellow, magenta, cyan, black).
A printing process that creates colour productions by overprinting screens that individually prints reds, yellows, blues and black. All colours can be represented as a combination of these four.
The four colours of ink used by a printer to create the entire spectrum of colours. Four-colour process uses CMYK, which is explained above.