Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Why Creating RGB And CMYK Can Be Difficult

By Franklin Skribbit


One of the greatest marketing points of your website is how fast it loads. Everywhere you look, internet providers are bragging about the speed of their connections.

The non-designer may think this is a simple task, thinking that anything that looks good on the computer will look good anywhere else. You have a picture, print it out or post it to the web.

These people dream of creating stunning and iconic imagery, thinking, "If only I had the natural talent to artistically create something like that." Yet these dreams are never fulfilled because the individual has already sold themselves short, miss-attributing a lack of skill and knowledge as a lack of ability.

First, color is printed differently to the screen then it is to a paper. Surely you've heard of RGB (red, green, blue) and CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and key [black]). These are two different methods to overlay colors to get any color you can imagine. Computers use RGB.

The following are 5 great tips to help you speed up the loading time of your website. Remember that even milliseconds of difference count in this game.

The first talent found in the graphic arts field is the ability to manipulate already created images. Some people have the incredible ability to (1) appreciate the beauty of an image, and (2) arrange text, objects, and other items around those images to create a more spectacular image.

Businesses are always looking for people that can do something with the images, not just create them. Some graphic artists build their careers around this one skill.

Second, clean up your coding. Remove extraneous spaces, unnecessary tags, white space, and other "extra" coding that will take some time for the browser to read.

Any graphic image has to created from an internal setting called RGB (which can be found in most design platforms). Printers, on the other hand, are combining colors of ink to paste on a page. Have you ever mixed too many paint colors together before? The results: a deep, muddy brown or black.

You ask them to draw a bird, and they'll have realistic sketches of a pelican, penguin, and pigeon on your desk within twenty minutes. These people have the gift of artistry and they create beautiful things.

Design programs also let you choose CMYK options when designing a document for print. At the root though, you can see that formula is different for both RGB and CMYK, and that's what makes preparing documents for both mediums so hard for graphic design professionals.

Outside of that, it never hurts to increase your website design education to learn the more formal approaches to CSS coding. You can learn a lot from a professor "in the know."

Fourth, limit your use of flash. Flash additions take up a lot of space. Although they add a beautiful element to your website, the file sizes are too bulky to be useful. They slow down loading time. Not to mention, they hurt you from an SEO standpoint. Google cannot read text in a Flash element. It therefore can't rank you high or low. You lose an opportunity to grow.

Oftentimes the only encouragement you need is to be enamored with the process and production of beautiful pieces. If you have the drive/love, than you have the ability to succeed in the graphic arts profession.

The process can still be hard at times, especially when you fall in love with a color that simply won't print right. Graphic arts professionals figure it out with time though.




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