V
Visualaid
Guest
So I had this terrible rgb low res. file from customer and it needed to print 4 color.
I converted the file to CMYK, sent to rip as composite leave unchanged (because the rip tells it to separate) from indesign to preserve the colors of the original artwork. It came out dull and crappy of course.
So they had me send it Composite CMYK the next time and it seemed to have brighter colors when looking at it in roam.
So the pressman swear it's my fault, but I tested another 4 color job, sending as both composite leave unchanged and composite cmyk , both looked exactly alike, looked great. This was better artwork, vector art- versus the first terrible file that was originally rgb and then converted to cmyk.
anyone shed some light on this? I am tired of being blamed for everything that goes wrong back there. could it be that the one file was crappy, and the next file was great.
composite cmyk vs composite leave unchanged...
thanks
I converted the file to CMYK, sent to rip as composite leave unchanged (because the rip tells it to separate) from indesign to preserve the colors of the original artwork. It came out dull and crappy of course.
So they had me send it Composite CMYK the next time and it seemed to have brighter colors when looking at it in roam.
So the pressman swear it's my fault, but I tested another 4 color job, sending as both composite leave unchanged and composite cmyk , both looked exactly alike, looked great. This was better artwork, vector art- versus the first terrible file that was originally rgb and then converted to cmyk.
anyone shed some light on this? I am tired of being blamed for everything that goes wrong back there. could it be that the one file was crappy, and the next file was great.
composite cmyk vs composite leave unchanged...
thanks