Adobe illustrator 10 Manuale Utente

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Adobe Illustrator Help
Applying Color 
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black; and Color 2 is 40% cyan, 20% magenta, 30% yellow, and 10% black; the resulting 
hard color is 40% cyan, 66% magenta, 40% yellow, and 10% black. 
The Soft Mix effect makes the underlying colors visible through the overlapping 
artwork, and then divides the image into its component faces. You specify the 
percentage of visibility you want in the overlapping colors.
Note: Applying either the Hard Mix or Soft Mix effect to objects removes their strokes and 
groups the objects.
In most cases, applying the Hard Mix or Soft Mix effect to objects painted using a mix of 
process and spot colors converts the color to CMYK. In the case of mixing a non-global 
process RGB color with a spot RGB color, all spot colors are converted to a non-global 
process RGB color.
If you overlap multiple objects, all overlapping objects are given the visibility level you 
select.
To mix colors by selecting each highest CMYK component value (Hard Mix):
Select a group in the artwork, or target a group or layer in the Layers palette. (For more 
information on targeting, see 
.) 
Choose Effect > Pathfinder > Hard Mix. 
To mix colors by specifying a mixing rate (Soft Mix):
Select a group in the artwork, or target a group or layer in the Layers palette. (For more 
information on targeting, see 
.) 
Choose Effect > Pathfinder > Soft Mix. 
Enter a value between 1% and 100% in the Mixing Rate text box to determine the 
percentage of visibility you want in the overlapping colors, and click OK.
Using filters to modify colors
Illustrator filters provide shortcuts for changing color attributes or blending colors 
between objects. 
Using the Adjust Colors and Convert filters
The Adjust Colors filter lets you change the color values in objects, as well as the tint of 
global colors. You can also use the Convert filters to convert objects between grayscale 
and your document’s color mode.
To adjust colors using the Adjust Colors filter:
Select the objects whose colors you want to adjust.
Choose Filter > Colors > Adjust Colors.
Select Convert and then a color mode. If the document is an RGB document, you can 
select between RGB and Grayscale; if the document is CMYK, you can select between 
CMYK and Grayscale.
Select Fill or Stroke (or both) to adjust the fill or stroke or both. 
Drag the sliders or enter values in the color value text boxes.