Talk:CMY color model
This redirect is written in American English, which has its own spelling conventions (color, defense, traveled) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. According to the relevant style guide, this should not be changed without broad consensus. |
This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||
|
Is there really a CMY color model?
editMost references I can find immediately follow (or even precede) it with CMYK color model and specifically talk about printing applications (which are all CMYK). I am not sure if this page should really be here, or just point to CMYK color model. For CMYK we can point to specific instance like SWOP, is there something comparable for CMY?Maneesh (talk) 20:27, 28 June 2019 (UTC)
CMY color model mixture guide
editThe CMY color model is a subtractive color model and, therefore, is used on a White surface in a bright area.
Primary colors
editCyan
Magenta
Yellow
Secondary colors/Mixing primary colors
editRed
Green
Blue
Mixtures:
editMagenta + Yellow = Red
Yellow + Cyan = Green
Cyan + Magenta = Blue
Tertiary colors
editRed shades
editRose
Orange
Mixtures:
editMagenta + Red = Rose
Yellow + Red = Orange
Green shades
editChartreuse
Spring
Mixtures:
editYellow + Green = Chartreuse
Cyan + Green = Spring
Blue shades
editAzure
Violet
Mixtures:
editCyan + Blue = Azure
Magenta + Blue = Violet
Mixing secondary colors
editMixtures:
editGreen + Blue = Dark Cyan or Teal
Blue + Red = Dark Magenta or Purple
Red + Green = Dark Yellow or Olive
All hues mixed
editBlack
Mixtures:
editCyan + Magenta + Yellow = Black
Color mixture between hues
editCyan - 1 part cyan
Azure-Cyan - 7 parts cyan and 1 part magenta
Azure - 3 parts cyan and 1 part magenta
Azure-Blue - 5 parts cyan and 3 parts magenta
Blue - 1 part cyan and 1 part magenta
Violet-Blue - 3 parts cyan and 5 parts magenta
Violet - 1 part cyan and 3 parts magenta
Violet-Magenta - 1 part cyan and 7 parts magenta
Magenta - 1 part magenta
Rose-Magenta - 7 parts magenta and 1 part yellow
Rose - 3 parts magenta and 1 part yellow
Rose-Red - 5 parts magenta and 3 parts yellow
Red - 1 part magenta and 1 part yellow
Orange-Red - 3 parts magenta and 5 parts yellow
Orange - 1 part magenta and 3 parts yellow
Orange-Yellow - 1 part magenta and 7 parts yellow
Yellow - 1 part yellow
Chartreuse-Yellow - 7 parts yellow and 1 part cyan
Chartreuse - 3 parts yellow and 1 part cyan
Chartreuse-Green - 5 parts yellow and 3 parts cyan
Green - 1 part yellow and 1 part cyan
Spring-Green - 3 parts yellow and 5 parts cyan
Spring - 1 part yellow and 3 parts cyan
Spring-Cyan - 1 part yellow and 7 parts cyan
Mixing a primary color with its complementary color
editVery Dark Cyan or Dark Teal
Very Dark Magenta or Dark Purple
Very Dark Yellow or Dark Olive
Cyan and Red
editCyan + Red = Very Dark Cyan or Dark Teal
Needs:
edit2× Cyan
1× Magenta and 1× Yellow to make 2× Red
A total of 4 parts (2× Cyan and 2× Red)
Demonstration:
edit1× Cyan + 1× Magenta + 1× Yellow = 3× Black
1× Cyan (remaining) + 1× Black (from the created mixture) = 2× Dark Cyan or Teal
2× Dark Cyan or Teal + 2× Black (remaining from the created mixture) = 4× Very Dark Cyan or Dark Teal
Magenta and Green
editMagenta + Green = Very Dark Magenta or Dark Purple
Needs:
edit2× Magenta
1× Yellow and 1× Cyan to make 2× Green
A total of 4 parts (2× Magenta and 2× Green)
Demonstration:
edit1× Magenta + 1× Yellow + 1× Cyan = 3× Black
1× Magenta (remaining) + 1× Black (from the created mixture) = 2× Dark Magenta or Purple
2× Dark Magenta or Purple + 2× Black (remaining from the created mixture) = 4× Very Dark Magenta or Dark Purple
Yellow and Blue
editYellow + Blue = Very Dark Yellow or Dark Olive
Needs:
edit2× Yellow
1× Cyan and 1× Magenta to make 2× Blue
A total of 4 parts (2× Yellow and 2× Blue)
Demonstration:
edit1× Yellow + 1× Cyan + 1× Magenta = 3× Black
1× Yellow (remaining) + 1× Black (from the created mixture) = 2× Dark Yellow or Olive
2× Dark Yellow or Olive + 2× Black (remaining from the created mixture) = 4× Very Dark Yellow or Dark Olive