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Using Spot Colors with Photos

First Impressions Spot Color PhotosProperly preparing photographs for spot color printing sometimes requires a little extra care and planning. A very common mistake we see here at First Impressions when using photos in a spot color document is saving the photograph in RGB or CMYK color modes. This creates several problems; saving a photo in RGB or CMYK will always result in either poor photo quality, or the photo disappearing altogether, EVEN if the photo appears to be black and white.

The proper way to save your photo for spot printing is in GRAYSCALE mode, regardless of what the final color will be. This can be done in Photoshop© by simply going to "Image -> Mode -> Grayscale".

There are several different ways to use photos in a spot color document, usually as a single colorized image or as a duotone. These also require a few extra steps in the design process.

First Impressions Spot Color PhotosSINGLE COLOR - The most common way to use photographs in spot color is by simply converting the image to a single color. In most cases, the photo is simply made black and white, which can be done easily by converting the photo to grayscale color mode (see above).

 

 

However, if you are using another color other than black, you can also colorize the photo. To do this:

EXAMPLE: You have set up a document in InDesign© that uses blue and red ink, and you want to put a photo in blue. You import the photo from your camera into Photoshop© and convert the image to grayscale mode. You place the photo in your InDesign© document, select it with the white arrow, and then select the "Blue" swatch to colorize the image blue.

First Impressions Duotone PhotoDUOTONE - Duotones allow you to create deeper, rich images by layering black and another ink color on top of each other in the printing process. To create a duotone:

EXAMPLE: You take a photo for the cover of your newsletter and want the image to stand out more than just a black and white photo. You open the image in Photoshop©, convert to grayscale, create the duotone, convert to multichannel mode and then back to grayscale. You place the final .psd file in your InDesign© document ready for color separations.

Remember, when using spot color printing, black counts as a color. So if you are printing a two color job with red and blue, adding black in a duotone image would be adding a third color. It is possible to print a duotone using any two colors, but black usually provides the sharpest image.

Confused? We're here to help. Call us at 845-692-4490 and we'll walk you through it.

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