Hi
A customer has supplied artwork (in Word Format) for a letterhead that is to be offset printed. We use a trade offset printer who requires (obviously) a PDF file with all images CMYK (no RGB). This word document has an logo in it that is RGB.
I am creating a PDF by printing to Adobe PDF from Word. To convert images to CMYK in the PDF, I then run the "convert to CMYK only" preflight in Acrobat.
What I'm then doing is a quick digital proof to make sure all looks ok before I send the file out to our offset printer. When I rip the original PDF (with RGB images), the rip converts the RGB to CMYK and for a particular blue I get a value of 88C 76M 0Y 0K. This is different to the CMYK value that say, the convert to CMYK only (SWOP) preflight gives me in Acrobat, which is 100C 67M 2Y 0K.
What I would like to know is how can I convert the RGB in the PDF to CMYK so that it gives me the same values (or very close to) as what our RIP converts them to? Or should I be converting to CMYK another way? The colour that I get from the RIP converting to CMYK is "better" (lighter and more like their previous jobs) than the colour I get from using the preflight (too dark).
I understand this post doesn't demonstrate a best practice approach (i.e. having artwork supplied in Word format for an offset job), but in the real world for a small shop it's not always possible to go back to a client and explain certain things or have them pay us for our designer to recreate the job in InDesign etc.
A customer has supplied artwork (in Word Format) for a letterhead that is to be offset printed. We use a trade offset printer who requires (obviously) a PDF file with all images CMYK (no RGB). This word document has an logo in it that is RGB.
I am creating a PDF by printing to Adobe PDF from Word. To convert images to CMYK in the PDF, I then run the "convert to CMYK only" preflight in Acrobat.
What I'm then doing is a quick digital proof to make sure all looks ok before I send the file out to our offset printer. When I rip the original PDF (with RGB images), the rip converts the RGB to CMYK and for a particular blue I get a value of 88C 76M 0Y 0K. This is different to the CMYK value that say, the convert to CMYK only (SWOP) preflight gives me in Acrobat, which is 100C 67M 2Y 0K.
What I would like to know is how can I convert the RGB in the PDF to CMYK so that it gives me the same values (or very close to) as what our RIP converts them to? Or should I be converting to CMYK another way? The colour that I get from the RIP converting to CMYK is "better" (lighter and more like their previous jobs) than the colour I get from using the preflight (too dark).
I understand this post doesn't demonstrate a best practice approach (i.e. having artwork supplied in Word format for an offset job), but in the real world for a small shop it's not always possible to go back to a client and explain certain things or have them pay us for our designer to recreate the job in InDesign etc.