Additive And Subtractive Color Systems - Minolta Color PAGEPRO EX Manual

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The Properties of Color

Additive and subtractive color systems

Color devices used in desktop publishing and printing simulate the
range of visible colors using a set of primary colors that are combined
to create other colors. There are two methods of creating a range of
colors from a set of primary colors. Computer monitors and scanners
use the
. Printing technologies, including Color
additive color model
PagePro Ex print devices and offset presses, use the
subtractive
.
color model
Additive (RGB) color
Color devices that use the additive color model make a range of colors
by combining varying amounts of red, green, and blue light. These
colors are called the
. White is created by adding
additive primaries
the maximum amount of red, green, and blue light available. Black
occurs wherever all three colors are absent. Grays are created by
adding varying amounts of all three colors together. Combining
varying amounts of any two of the additive primaries creates a third,
saturated hue.
A familiar device that uses this color model is the computer monitor.
Monitors have red, green, and blue
that emit varying
phosphors
amounts of light to display a given color. Scanners create digital
representations of colors by measuring their red, green, and blue
components through colored filters.
Subtractive (CMY and CMYK) color
The subtractive color model is used in color printing, and in color
photographic prints and transparencies. While the additive color
model simulates the visible spectrum of color by adding light of three
primary hues, the subtractive color model uses a "white" or neutral
light source containing light of many wavelengths. Inks, toners, or
other
are used to selectively absorb (subtract) certain
colorants
wavelengths of light that otherwise would be reflected or transmitted
by the media in question.
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