![]() Your printer’s dye-sublimation inks also have a wider gamut of colors they can print, opposed to what the eye can see on screen. When printing, your settings determine what color formulas are used in RGB mode to work with your CMYK printer to produce color. Your monitor displays in RGB, but the color gamut (array) you can see on the monitor is limited. ![]() When you prepare an image to sublimate, you use RGB color mode (red, green, blue) to print with CMYK inks (cyan, magenta, yellow, black). Let’s talk about how color works when sublimating. When comparing your monitor colors to those on your sublimated product, there are many reasons why colors are dramatically different. Ever wonder why your color looks so different on screen than when you sublimate? Think about the last time you noticed TV screens on sale at your local retailer - did they all look the same? Probably not, since resolution, brightness, clarity, and other factors vary by model.
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June 2023
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