PUB2002: Prepress: Adobe PhotoShop CMYK TIFFs Display Colors Incorrectly (288125)
The information in this article applies to:
This article was previously published under Q288125 SYMPTOMS When you insert into Publisher 2002 a CMYK Tagged Image
File Format (TIFF) image that was created and saved in Adobe PhotoShop, you may
notice that the colors displayed are different from the original. Also, when
you print a composite with a CMYK TIFF image, the colors that are printed are
different from the original.
Typically, reds have too much blue, and
are displayed and printed as purple. Yellows have too much red, and are
displayed and printed as orange. Blues are too dark. CAUSE Microsoft Office XP and Microsoft Publisher 2002 use GDI+
to convert CMYK TIFFs. GDI+ adheres to the ICC (International Color Consortium)
Standards and looks for the image's color profiles, based on the ICC standard
location. Adobe PhotoShop version 5.0 and more recent versions support the ICC
standard location for placing the color profile within the TIFF file.
Adobe PhotoShop 4.5 and earlier versions do not support the ICC
Standard location for placing the color-profile information within a TIFF file.
These versions of PhotoShop place the color-profile information in a private
location within the TIFF file. GDI+ is unable to read the correct color values
from images that are saved in these earlier versions. WORKAROUND To work around this problem, use one of the following
methods. Method 1 Using Adobe PhotoShop version 5 or 5.5:
- Save the TIFF as an Adobe PhotoShop file (PSD).
- Save the PSD as a TIFF.
- Select PC byte order and LZW compression.
Using Adobe PhotoShop version 6:
- On the File menu, click Save As to create a new copy.
- When you save the new copy, you must select a Color Profile
to embed with the graphic.
Method 2 Save the CMYK TIFF from Adobe PhotoShop as an EPS (Encapsulated
PostScript) graphic with preview. Publisher supports the CMYK information from
the EPS graphic, regardless of the Adobe PhotoShop version, and processes it
correctly for on-screen and as a composite print. Method 3 Using Microsoft Office Document Imaging:
- Click Start, and then click All
Programs.
- Click Microsoft Office Tools, and then
click Microsoft Office Document Imaging.
- Click File, and then click
Open.
- Locate and select the CMYK TIFF file, and then click
Open.
- Click Edit, click Select
All, and then click Copy Image.
- In Publisher 2002 click Edit, and then
click Paste.
STATUSMicrosoft
has confirmed that this is a problem in the Microsoft products that are listed
at the beginning of this article.
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 12/20/2005 |
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Keywords: | kbbug KB288125 |
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