Software & Apps > Design 50 50 people found this article helpful What You Need to Know About Color Separations in Printing Color separations make printing complex color images on paper possible By Eric Miller Eric Miller Twitter Writer New York University Eric Miller is a former Lifewire writer, freelance graphic designer, and owner of a web development and graphic design studio established in 1998. lifewire's editorial guidelines Updated on January 10, 2020 Tweet Share Email MirageC / Getty Images Tweet Share Email Design Graphic Design Photoshop Animation & Video 3D Design Color separation is the process by which original full-color digital files are separated into individual color components for four-color process printing. Every element in the file is printed in a combination of four colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black, known as CMYK in the world of commercial printing. CMYK Color Model: For Print Projects Combining these four ink colors produces a wide spectrum of colors on the printed page. In the four-color printing process, each of the four color separations is applied to a separate printing plate and placed on one cylinder of a printing press. As sheets of paper run through the printing press, each plate transfers an image in one of the four colors to the paper. The colors—which are applied as minuscule dots—combine to produce a full-color image. Jon Sullivan/CC BY-SA 4.0-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 A commercial printing company handles the work of making the color separations on most projects. The company uses proprietary software to separate digital files into the four CMYK colors and to transfer the color-separated information to plates or directly to digital presses. Most print designers work in the CMYK model to more accurately predict the appearance of the colors in the final printed product. RGB: For Digital Projects CMYK is not the best color model for documents destined to be viewed on a screen, however. These are best built using the RGB (red, green, blue) color model. The RGB model contains more color possibilities than the CMYK model because the human eye can see more colors than ink on paper can duplicate. Jacci Howard Bear If you use RGB in your design files and send the files to a commercial printer, they are still color-separated into the four CMYK colors for print. However, in the process of converting the colors from RGB to CMYK, color can shift from what you see on screen to what is reproducible on paper. Set Up Digital Files for Color Separation Graphic designers should set up digital files that are destined for four-color separation in the CMYK mode to avoid color surprises. All the high-end software apps—Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign, Corel Draw, QuarkXPress, and many others—offer this capability. It's just a matter of changing a preference. An Exception to the Rule If your printed project contains a spot color, that color should not be marked as a CMYK color. It should be preserved as a spot color so that, when the color separations are made, it will appear on its own separation and be printed in its own special-color ink. Programs such as Adobe Photoshop make this process easy. Spot color is a color that must match a specific color exactly, Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Get the Latest Tech News Delivered Every Day Subscribe Tell us why! Other Not enough details Hard to understand Submit