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Rich black, in printing, is an ink mixture of solid black over one or more of the other CMYK colors, [1] resulting in a darker tone than black ink alone generates in a printing process. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Rich black
In the CMYK model, it is the opposite: white is the natural color of the paper or other background, and black results from a full combination of colored inks. To save cost on ink, and to produce deeper black tones, unsaturated and dark colors are produced by using black ink instead of or in addition to combinations of cyan, magenta, and yellow.
In printing, registration black is a black color that includes 100% of each of the process colors used. Typically these are cyan , magenta , yellow and black ( CMYK ), [ 4 ] but if different colors are used, registration black marks are made with all of the colorants (inks).
A CMYK value is meaningful only if you can specify what ink–paper–process standard it is supposed to be used with. If your color article does not specifically concern a quirk in the CMYK process (such as rich black), it's best to leave it unspecified since it does not add additional information.
A scary, sobering look at fatal domestic violence in the United States
Black women, particularly those who live in the U.S., have to contend with both the gender wealth gap and racial wealth gap. For every $1 the average white man in America earns, the average Black...
CMYK is not recommended in new articles except for colors only meaningful in CMYK (e.g. rich black). There are simply too many versions of CMYK around, with differences between inks (what does "cyan" look like?), paper (how much dot gain, what color paper), machine, plus flexibilities
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