Yellow: Difference between revisions

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However, straight yellow on its own is often too light to be read clearly (unless at very large sizes). Whereas most of the other ink above can be be used as legible spot colors.
However, straight yellow on its own is often too light to be read clearly (unless at very large sizes). Whereas most of the other ink above can be be used as legible spot colors.
=== Combinations ===
* {{ink chip|Yellow}} and {{ink chip|Black}} combine to make dull olive greens.
* {{ink chip|Yellow}} and {{ink chip|Fluorescent Pink}} combine to make bright, rich oranges (warmer than {{ink chip|Fluorescent Orange}}).


== Usage ==
== Usage ==

Revision as of 16:46, 29 November 2025

Yellow
イエロー
Color coordinates
Hex#FFE800
RGB(255, 232, 0)
CMYK(0, 9, 100, 0)
CIELab*(90, -3, 90)
PantoneYellow U
Ink information
Brand
Series Standard
Product number(s)
GR/RPS-4391
Z-TypeS-4279

Yellow is one of the standard inks from —it is a bright process yellow, and is the most common form of yellow used in CMYK color setups.

Yellow
75%
50%
25%

Characteristics

As the other common yellow inks, Sunflower Light Lime Flat Gold Bright Olive Green Sunflower, are very far from Yellow in hue, it operates in a unique place as far as color mixing goes—and can expand the gamut of most ink palettes.

However, straight yellow on its own is often too light to be read clearly (unless at very large sizes). Whereas most of the other ink above can be be used as legible spot colors.

Combinations

Usage

There are 280 places printing with Yellow (73% of all active places).

Template:Ink relationships

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