When you generate proofs, you can reduce spot colors by converting them to process color, mapping them to other spot colors, or omitting them entirely.
When you preserve or reduce spot colors in a proof, the changes that you make affect only the proof. The PDF digital master remains unchanged.

 

Preserving spot colors in proofs

 

 

Reducing spot colors in proofs

 

If you convert spot colors to process color, Color Combiner can simulate the hue of spot colors in a proof-including traps, knockouts, and overprints—using the standard four process colors.


When to preserve or reduce spot colors in a proof

Preserve spot colors in proofs if you want to see the spot colors in the proof and the printer supports the spot colors.

Reduce spot colors in proofs in these situations:

 

How to preserve or reduce spot colors in proofs

To preserve all spot colors in proofs, change a setting in the process template. See Preserving spot colors in loose page output and Preserving spot colors in imposition output.
To reduce spot colors in loose page output choose one of these two methods:

To Reduce

Use This Method

Consider This

All spot colors in loose page output

Change a setting in the loose page output process template. See Reducing all spot colors in loose page output.

With this method, you have to convert all spot colors to process color. You cannot omit or map spot colors.

Individual spot colors in loose page output

Use the Color Output dialog box when you start the proof process.
See Reducing individual spot colors in loose page output.

With this method, you can convert or omit spot colors.
This method works only with raster files, not with vector files.
If you use the Color Output dialog box and edit the process template during the same proof process, the most recently applied settings take precedence.

To reduce spot colors in imposition output choose one of these two methods:

To Reduce

Use This Method

Consider This

All spot colors in imposition output

Change a setting in the Imposition Output process template. See Reducing all spot colors in imposition output.

With this method, you have to convert spot colors to process color. You cannot omit or map spot colors.

Individual spot colors in imposition output

Use the Color Separations dialog box before you generate the proof.
See Reducing individual spot colors in imposition output.

With this method, you can convert, omit, or map spot colors.
When you use this method, it affects all subsequent proofs, final output, and exports.
The Color Separations dialog box does not work with PDF files that are composite. Also, with vector files, you can do spot-to-spot mapping, but you cannot omit spot colors or convert them to process color.
If you use the Color Separations dialog box and edit the process template during the same proof process, the most recently applied settings take precedence.