CMYK Color Picker
Pick a color and copy its CMYK code, plus HEX, RGB, HSL and more.
How to use the CMYK color picker
- Start from the color you want on screen, or paste a HEX or RGB code to see its closest CMYK mix.
- Adjust cyan, magenta and yellow to set the basic color, watching the preview rather than guessing at the numbers.
- Raise the key (black) value to deepen and darken the color, or keep it low for brighter, lighter tones.
- Copy the CMYK values into your design file, and make sure the document itself is set to CMYK before it goes to print.
What is a CMYK color?
CMYK is the color model of print, written as four ink percentages like cmyk(88%, 44%, 0%, 0%). Where a screen adds light to make color, ink does the opposite: it absorbs light bouncing off a white page, which is why the model is called subtractive. The four numbers simply tell the printer how much of each ink to lay down.
Meaning of each value in a CMYK color
Why do you need a CMYK color picker?
A CMYK color picker is a tool for choosing a color as cyan, magenta, yellow and key (black) ink values for print. With a CMYK color picker, you can dial in an exact ink mix, see it on screen before anything is printed, and copy print-ready numbers to hand straight to your designer or printer.
How CMYK print colors differ from screen colors
- Bright screen colors often print duller, because ink on paper cannot glow the way a backlit pixel does.
- Deep blacks usually use a mix, such as a rich black of 60/40/40/100, rather than key ink alone.
- Thin text and fine lines print sharpest in solid key (black) only, not a four-ink mix.
- Always confirm the final file is in CMYK mode before sending it to a printer, so colors do not shift unexpectedly.
Where CMYK is used
CMYK is for anything physically printed: flyers, packaging, business cards, posters and magazines. If you picked your color on screen, run it through the HEX to CMYK converter or RGB to CMYK converter to get print-ready values you can hand to your printer.
Why CMYK still matters
Ignoring CMYK in a screen-first world is tempting, but it becomes a problem the moment anything is printed. Designing a bright color that cannot survive ink wastes time. Checking the CMYK early, before a proof, is the cheapest way to avoid an unpleasant surprise at the printer.
K stands for key, the key plate that carried fine detail and black ink in traditional printing. Using K also avoids confusion with the B (blue) in RGB.
Screens emit light and cover a wider range of colors than ink on paper can, so the most vivid colors are toned down when converted to CMYK.
No. Some bright RGB colors fall outside the CMYK range and are shifted to the nearest printable color, which is why a proof or test print is worth doing.