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Importing CMYK logos into Photoshop as smart objects (to retain the vector qualities) results in Pure CMYK Black portions appearing "lighter" than the RGB background’s blacks (rich black).
The printer will be printing in numeric RGB, so I don’t really need the CMYK layers to remain CMYK.
The project still says it’s RGB, but double-clicking the logo (smart object) pulls up Illustrator, which reveals this object is indeed CMYK.
I was the blacks to be black, and I’m guessing the best way to do this would be to edit the logo in illustrator so that it uses RGB black, and not pure cmyk black. How do I do this? Change from CMYK to RGB in Illustrator, I mean… so I can then save and return to the Photoshop project, and hopefully see those blacks as rich blacks.
The printer will be printing in numeric RGB, so I don’t really need the CMYK layers to remain CMYK.
The project still says it’s RGB, but double-clicking the logo (smart object) pulls up Illustrator, which reveals this object is indeed CMYK.
I was the blacks to be black, and I’m guessing the best way to do this would be to edit the logo in illustrator so that it uses RGB black, and not pure cmyk black. How do I do this? Change from CMYK to RGB in Illustrator, I mean… so I can then save and return to the Photoshop project, and hopefully see those blacks as rich blacks.
How to Master Sharpening in Photoshop
Give your photos a professional finish with sharpening in Photoshop. Learn to enhance details, create contrast, and prepare your images for print, web, and social media.