Spot Colors in Photoshop
Spot colors are premixed inks that are used in the commercial printing process. They may occur alone or in addition to a CMYK image. Each spot color must have its own plate on the printing press, where it is used to apply the premixed ink. Spot color inks are often used when printing logos since the color must be exactly the same no matter where the logo occurs. Spot colors are identified by one of the color-matching systems. In the U.S., the Pantone Matching System is the most common color-matching system, and Photoshop supports it. Because varnishes also require their own plates on the printing press, they are treated as spot colors in Photoshop files destined for a commercial printing company. An image designed in Photoshop with spot channels must be saved in DCS 2.0 or PDF format before it is exported to preserve the spot color. The image can then be placed in a page layout program, such as InDesign, with the spot color information intact.
How to Create a New Spot Channel in Photoshop
To create a new spot channel in Photoshop: In the Channels palette, you’ll see a new channel labeled with the name of the spot color you chose.
How to Apply Spot Color in Photoshop
Use the Brush tool or other editing tools to add spot color to the image. Paint with black to add spot color at 100 percent opacity, or paint with gray to add spot color with less opacity.
How to Save an Image With a Spot Color in Photoshop
Save the completed image as either a PDF or DCS 2.0 file to preserve the spot color information. When you import the PDF or DCS file into a page layout application, the spot color is imported. Depending on what you need to appear in the spot color, you may prefer to set it up in the page layout program. For example, if only a headline is destined to print in spot color, it can be set in the layout program directly. However, if you need to add a company logo to an image, creating spot color channels in Photoshop is the way to go.