Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2
User Guide
259
Proofing colors
Soft-proofing colors
In a traditional publishing workflow, you print a hard proof of your document to preview how its colors will look
when reproduced on a specific output device. In a color-managed workflow, you can use the precision of color
profiles to soft-proof your document directly on the monitor. You can display an on-screen preview of how your
document’s colors will look when reproduced on a particular output device. If you are authoring a website in GoLive,
you can also soft-proof how colors will look when viewed in different browsers and with different color profiles.
Keep in mind that the reliability of the soft proof depends upon the quality of your monitor, the profiles of your
monitor and output devices, and the ambient lighting conditions of your work environment.
Note: A soft proof alone doesn’t let you preview how overprinting will look when printed on an offset press. If you work
with Illustrator or InDesign documents that contain overprinting, turn on Overprint Preview to accurately preview
overprints in a soft proof.
Using a soft proof to preview the final output of a document on your monitor
A. Document in the working space
B. Document’s color values are translated to color space of chosen proof profile (usually the output de-
vice’s profile).
C. Monitor displays proof profile’s interpretation of document’s color values.
To soft-proof colors
1
In Illustrator, InDesign, or Photoshop, choose View > Proof Setup, and do one of the following:
Choose a preset that corresponds to the output condition you want to simulate. (See “Soft proof presets” on
page 260.)
Choose Custom (Photoshop and InDesign) or Customize (Illustrator) to create a custom proof setup for a specific
output condition. This option is recommended for the most accurate preview of your final printed piece. (See
“Custom soft proof options” on page 260.)
2
Choose View > Proof Colors to toggle the soft-proof display on and off. When soft proofing is on, a check mark
appears next to the Proof Colors command, and the name of the proof preset or profile appears at the top of the
document window.
To compare the colors in the original image and the colors in the soft proof, open the document in a new window
before you set up the soft proof.
A
B
C