Good addition, Gary.
That's a reason why many companies has there logo/house colors in a spotcolor like pantone or here in Germany HKS.
Many of these colors are out of a printable CMYK gamut.
Printable View
Good addition, Gary.
That's a reason why many companies has there logo/house colors in a spotcolor like pantone or here in Germany HKS.
Many of these colors are out of a printable CMYK gamut.
ok I will resist the temptation to go into additive and subtractive colour theory....
in painting with real paint, basically, adding white to a colour is a tint, adding black to a colour is a shade
digitally you manipulate saturation and value, and so I could point out it is an HSV colour model you should be using not RGB, let alone CMYK.... ;)
but xara allows you to do this with CMYK and that is what the OP asked...
I agree it makes little sense to do it in CMYK, but if i were working with CMYK I would be using affinity not xara [and the same goes for true greyscale colour model]