• | To change an image to a duotone |
The following four variations of the color mode correspond to the number of additional inks:
• | Monotone — a grayscale image colored with a single tone |
• | Duotone — a grayscale image colored with two tones. In most cases, one is black and the other is colored. |
• | Tritone — a grayscale image colored with three tones. In most cases, one is black and the other two are colored. |
• | Quadtone — a grayscale image colored with four tones. In most cases, one is black and the other three are colored. |
Specifying how overprint colors display
Duotones hold their color ink information when you save to EPS, PDF, Corel DESIGNER (DES), and Corel PHOTO-PAINT (CPT) file formats. Other file formats don’t support duotone images.
To change an image to a duotone |
1 . | Click a bitmap. |
2 . | Click Bitmaps Mode Duotone (8-bit). |
3 . | Click the Curves tab. |
4 . | Choose a duotone type from the Type list box. |
5 . | Double-click an ink color in the Type window. |
6 . | In the Select color dialog box, choose a color, and click OK. |
If you want to adjust the color’s tone curve, click the ink tone curve on the grid to add a node, and drag the node to adjust the percentage of color at that point on the curve. |
7 . | Repeat steps 5 and 6 for each ink color you want to use. |
Enable the Show all check box.
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Click Save. Choose the disk and folder where you want to save the file, and type a filename in the File name box.
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Click the Overprint tab, and enable the Use overprint check box. Double-click the color you want to edit, and choose a new color.
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You can load preset ink colors by clicking Load, locating the file in which the ink settings are stored, and double-clicking the filename.
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