cmy
CMY is a color model used in printing and color reproduction based on three subtractive primaries: cyan, magenta, and yellow. In subtractive color mixing, colors are created by removing light from white. Each CMY ink absorbs (subtracts) part of the spectrum: cyan absorbs red, magenta absorbs green, and yellow absorbs blue. When layered, these inks absorb more wavelengths and reflect less light, producing a range of visible colors. In theory, combining the three should yield black, but due to pigment impurities and ink formulation, the result is a dark, muddy color rather than true black.
To achieve deeper blacks and better contrast, printing often uses a fourth ink: black, denoted K in
Practical considerations include the fact that the CMY color gamut is generally smaller than the RGB gamut,
Applications of CMY/CMYK span offset printing, inkjet printing, dye-sublimation, and other color reproduction workflows in publishing,