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Adobe Creative Suite 5 Printing Guide 13
sheetfed printing, it’s not always the best choice. A more appropriate
conversion for a sheetfed operation might be to choose the U.S.
Sheetfed CMYK working space by selecting U.S. Sheetfed Coated (or
Uncoated) v2 from the CMYK menu in the Color Settings dialog box. If
you want to take more control, you can create a custom CMYK
conversion. From the same CMYK working space menu, choose
Custom CMYK. In the Custom CMYK color settings dialog box, enter the
values that will result in a CMYK conversion that best meets your
needs. You may find it easiest to establish your settings in the
Photoshop Color Settings dialog box (Edit > Color Settings). Keep in
mind that, for optimum results, you should fingerprint your presses and
proofing systems, and use custom profiles.
Once you have established a color setting in Photoshop, save and name
it by clicking the Save button in the Color Settings dialog box. The
settings will be placed in the correct folder so that the entire Creative
Suite can access them. However, you can save them to another location
as a way to distribute them to others. The file you create, with the
extension .csf, contains the settings you share with other users in your
shop or with customers.
To import color settings, click the Load button in the Edit > Color
Settings dialog box in Illustrator, InDesign, or Photoshop. Navigate to
the .csf file you want to load and select it. Once the color setting is
imported into one of the applications, you will need to synchronize
settings so that the other components can access them. The easiest way
to do that is to use Adobe Bridge CS5. Here’s how:
1. Launch Bridge.
2. Choose Edit > Creative Suite Color Seings.
3. From the list, choose your color seings by name. If you have not
already loaded a supplied color seing, you can browse for it by
clicking the Show Saved Color Seings Files and then navigating to
the desired seings le.
4. Click Apply.
Using Bridge to Synchronize Color Seings
Adobe Bridge displays a red “pie” section to indicate that color seings are not synchronized
across components that use color management. To synchronize seings in all applications,
select the proper color seing from the list of Suite Color Seings, or browse to import a
supplied seing by clicking the Show Saved Color Seings Files buon. Click Apply to
synchronize the seings.
Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Acrobat X Pro will now be able to
use the same color settings. Each application will render color the same
way, so color across the applications will look consistent on screen and
will print consistently.
If you do not wish to implement color management, you may elect to
use what is termed a safe CMYK workflow. A safe CMYK workflow
ensures that CMYK color numbers are preserved all the way to the final
output device, as opposed to being converted by the color
management system. This workflow is beneficial if you want to
incrementally adopt color management practices. For example, you can
use CMYK profiles to soft-proof without risking unintended color
conversions before final output.
Illustrator and InDesign support a safe CMYK workflow by default;
when you open or import a CMYK image with an embedded profile,
the software ignores the profile and preserves the raw color numbers. If
you want your Creative Suite application to adjust color numbers based
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