Adobe photoshop cs2 Benutzerhandbuch

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
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For the Type option, select Monotone, Duotone, Tritone, or Quadtone. 
Click the  color box  (the  solid square).  Then  use the  color picker or click  the Custom button in the  color picker to  
select an ink from the Custom Colors dialog box. 
Note: To produce fully saturated colors, specify inks in descending order—darkest at the top, lightest at the bottom. 
Click the curve box next to the color ink box and adjust the duotone curve for each ink color.
Set overprint colors, if necessary.
Click OK.
To  apply a duotone effect to only part of an image, convert  the duotone  image to Multichannel mode—this converts  
the duotone curves to spot channels. You can then erase part of the spot channel for areas that you want printed as 
standard grayscale. 
See also 
To modify the duotone curve for a given ink 
In a duotone image, each ink has a separate curve that specifies how the color is distributed across the shadows and 
highlights. This curve maps each grayscale value in the original image to a specific ink percentage. 
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To preview any adjustments, select the Preview option. 
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Click the curve box next to the ink color box. 
The default duotone curve, a straight diagonal line, indicates that the grayscale values in the original image map to 
an equal percentage of ink. At this setting, a 50% midtone pixel is rendered with a 50% tint of the ink, a 100% shadow 
is rendered in 100% color, and so on. 
Adjust the duotone curve for each ink by dragging a point on the graph or by entering values for the different ink 
percentages. 
In the curve graph, the horizontal axis moves from highlights (at the left) to shadows (at the right). Ink density 
increases as you move up the vertical axis. You can specify up to 13 points on the curve. When you specify two 
values along the curve, Photoshop calculates intermediate values. As you adjust the curve, values are automatically 
entered in the percentage text boxes. 
The value you enter in the text box indicates the percentage of the ink color used to represent the grayscale value 
in the original image. For example, if you enter 70 in the 100% text box, a 70% tint of that ink color is used to print 
the 100% shadows. 
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Click Save in the Duotone Curve dialog box to save curves created with this dialog box. 
Click Load to load these curves or curves created in the Curves dialog box, including curves created using the 
Arbitrary Map option. 
You can use the Info palette to display ink percentages when you’re working with duotone images. Set the readout 
mode to Actual Color to determine what ink percentages will be applied when the image is printed. These values 
reflect any changes you’ve entered in the Duotone Curve dialog box. 
See also