2011/11/20 Daniel Greenhoe <dgreen...@gmail.com>: > 2011/11/20 Zdenek Wagner <zdenek.wag...@gmail.com>: >> No. > >> LCMS is a good choice. > LCMS is "Little Color Management System"? > (http://www.color.org/opensource.xalter)? > Yes.
>> 1. It ensures that the colours you specify in the document will be converted >> to cmyk. >> However, the corrections are wrong. >> 2. xcolor does not look into inserted graphics,... > > But what if I hand define all my colors using cmyk syntax like this for > example > \definecolor{magenta}{cmyk}{0,1,0,0} > and create all my graphics using pstricks and related packages (with > no inserted graphics)? > Then won't the resulting pdf be cmyk compliant and contain exactly the > colors I defined? > That's what I do. Printed colour samples are commercially available. They are printed on different types of papers and CMYK values are given. Thus you select the required colour on a proper paper and use it. Sometimes I select the colour in gimp and then using LCMS convert the values from RGB to CMYK. Scanned images are also easy. I keep them as TIF, using LCMS convert them to CMYK and then by tiff2pdf to PDF that can be included by \includegraphics. > Dan > > > > > 2011/11/20 Zdenek Wagner <zdenek.wag...@gmail.com>: >> 2011/11/19 Daniel Greenhoe <dgreen...@gmail.com>: >>> Print shops often require pdf files containing color to be encoded >>> using CMYK colorspace values. >>> >>> Version 2.11 of the xcolor package says that cmyk is "supported by >>> Postscripts directly" (page 8). So if I simply specify >>> \usepackage[cmyk]{xcolor} >>> in the preamble and compile with XeTeX/XeLaTeX, is that sufficient to >>> ensure the resulting pdf is cmyk encoded? >>> >> No. >> >> 1. It ensures that the colours you specify in the document will be >> converted to cmyk. However, the corrections are wrong. If you wish to >> convert the colours properly, you have to use colour profiles. LCMS is >> a good choice. Useful ICC profiles come with different products as >> Adobe Reader, colour printers, scanners etc. They can also be >> downloaded from the web. Calculations in the xcolor package can only >> be used if you are satisfied with approximate colours. It is written >> in the documentation that conversions are device dependent. >> >> 2. xcolor does not look into inserted graphics, you have to convert >> your images to cmyk separately. Again LCMS is a good tool for this >> purpose. >> >>> Secondly, is there any free utility available for checking the >>> colorspace encoding of pdf files (maybe similar to foolab's pdffonts >>> for checking embedded fonts). >>> >> I have not found any. Since I produce PDF files for printing very >> often, I calculated that commercial Adobe Acrobat is cheaper than the >> risk of paying unusable books, thus I have bought it. >> >>> Many thanks in advance, >>> Dan >>> >>> >>> -------------------------------------------------- >>> Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: >>> http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Zdeněk Wagner >> http://hroch486.icpf.cas.cz/wagner/ >> http://icebearsoft.euweb.cz >> >> >> >> -------------------------------------------------- >> Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: >> http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex >> > > > > -------------------------------------------------- > Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex > -- Zdeněk Wagner http://hroch486.icpf.cas.cz/wagner/ http://icebearsoft.euweb.cz -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex