|
|
About swatches
Swatches are
named colors, tints, gradients, and patterns. The swatches associated
with a document appear in the Swatches panel. Swatches can appear individually
or in groups.
You can open
libraries of swatches from other Illustrator documents and various color
systems. Swatch libraries appear in separate panels and are not
saved with the document.
The Swatches
panel and swatch library panels can contain the following types
of swatches:
- Process colors
- A process color
is printed using a combination of the four standard process inks:
cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. By default, Illustrator defines
new swatches as process colors.
- Global process colors
- A global color
is automatically updated throughout your artwork when you edit it.
All spot colors are global; however, process colors can be either
global or local. You can identify global color swatches by the global color
icon
(when
the panel is in list view) or a triangle in the lower corner (when
the panel is in thumbnail view). - Spot colors
- A spot color is
a premixed ink that is used instead of, or in addition to, CMYK
process inks. You can identify spot-color swatches by the spot-color icon
(when
the panel is in list view) or a dot in the lower corner
(when the panel is in thumbnail view). - Gradients
- A
gradient is a graduated blend between two or more colors or tints of
the same color or different colors. Gradient colors can be assigned
as CMYK process colors, RGB colors, or a spot color. Transparency
applied to a gradient stop, is preserved when the gradient is saved
as a gradient swatch. The aspect-ratio and angle values of elliptical
gradients (those created by adjusting the aspect ratio or angle
of a radial gradient) are not saved.
- Patterns
- Patterns
are repeating (tiled) paths, compound paths, text with solid fills
or no fill.
- None
- The None swatch removes the stroke or
fill from an object. You can’t edit or remove this swatch.
- Registration
- The
registration swatch
is
a built‑in swatch that causes objects filled or stroked with it
to print on every separation from a PostScript printer. For example,
registration marks use the Registration color so that printing plates
can be aligned precisely on a press. You can’t remove this swatch.Note: If you use the Registration
color for type, and then you separate the file and print it, the
type may not register properly and the black ink may appear muddy. To avoid
this, use black ink for type.
- Color groups
- Color
groups can contain process, spot, and global process colors. They
cannot contain pattern, gradient, none, or registration swatches.
You create color groups based on harmonies by using either the Color
Guide panel or the Edit Colors/Recolor Artwork dialog box. To put
existing swatches into a color group, select the swatches and click
the New Color Group icon
in
the Swatches panel. You can identify a color group by the folder
icon .
You can also
create tints in the Swatches panel. A tint is a global process color
or spot color with a modified intensity. Tints of the same color
are linked together, so that if you edit the color of a tint swatch,
all associated tint swatches (and the objects painted with those
swatches) change color, though the tint values remain unchanged.
Tints are identified by a percentage (when the Swatches panel is
in list view)
|