An abstract color wheel to understand RGB vs CMYK color gamut

RGB vs CMYK: Why Colours on Screen and Print Look Different

Color is one of the most powerful tools in design. It sets the mood before a single word is read, signals what kind of brand you are, and stays in people’s memory long after they’ve put down your brochure or closed your website. But here’s something most people outside the design world never get told: the same color can look completely different depending on where it lives.
A bright blue on your website and that same blue on your business card, they’re not the same thing. Getting them to match takes more than picking the right shade. It takes understanding the difference between RGB vs CMYK, the two colour systems that govern how color works on screens versus how it works in print.
Once you understand this, you can crack the code to finding the perfect color for any medium. Suddenly, the logic behind file formats, print specs, and designer checklists starts making sense. You stop guessing and start making decisions that fit your design, which ends up on a phone screen, a product label, or a billboard.

Understanding The Basics of Colors

Everything you see has colour because of light.
When light hits an object, that object absorbs some of it and reflects the rest back to your eyes. The part that gets reflected is the color you see. A red apple looks red because it absorbs every other color of light and reflects only red. A white wall reflects almost everything. A black surface absorbs nearly all of it.
Now here’s where it gets relevant to design. There are two ways colour is produced artificially, through light and through ink. A screen produces colour by emitting light directly. A printer produces colour by layering ink on paper, which then reflects light from the room around it.
Two different methods. Two different results. And that’s exactly why RGB and CMYK exist as two separate colour systems, one built for screens, one built for print.

What Is RGB?

RGB stands for Red, Green, Blue. It is an additive color model, which means colors are created by adding light together. This color mode is the standard for anything that involves a digital screen. Whether it is a smartphone, a high-definition television, or a laptop monitor, every pixel is made up of these three light sources.

RGB colors are defined by values ranging from 0 to 255 for each channel. So a vivid orange might be R: 255, G: 100, B: 0. The total possible combinations run into the millions, which is why RGB can produce colors that feel deeply rich and luminous on a screen.

Visualisation of a color wheel to understand what is RGB color mode

When to Use RGB?

Use RGB for anything that will be viewed on a screen:

  • Websites, landing pages, and web banners
  • Social media graphics and digital ads
  • Video content, animations, and motion graphics
  • App interfaces and UI/UX design
  • Email newsletters and digital presentations

If your audience is going to view the final design on a phone, a laptop, a TV, or any other screen, RGB is the correct colour mode.

What Is CMYK?

CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Key (Black). It is a subtractive color model. Instead of adding light, you’re layering ink that subtracts light by absorbing certain wavelengths and reflecting others back to the viewer. Because paper cannot emit light, the range of colors it can produce is smaller than a digital screen.

Theoretically, mixing cyan, magenta, and yellow at full density should produce black, but in practice, it produces a muddy dark brown. That’s why black (Key) ink is added separately to give print designs depth, detail, and true dark tones. CMYK values are expressed in percentages. A deep navy blue might be C: 98, M: 74, Y: 0, K: 18.

According to Pantone’s color research and printing standards, the CMYK mode, the range of colours it can reproduce, is narrower than the RGB mode. This is why some colours that look electric on a screen cannot be replicated in print with the same intensity.

Visualisation of a color wheel to understand what is CMYK color mode

When to Use CMYK?

Use CMYK for anything that will be physically printed:

  • Business cards, letterheads, and stationery
  • Brochures, flyers, and catalogues
  • Packaging design and product labels
  • Posters, banners, and large-format print
  • Magazines, books, and editorial design

If a printer is involved at any point in the output, the file should be in CMYK.

What Is the Real Difference Between RGB vs CMYK?

In simple words, RGB is for screens or digital media, and CMYK is for print media. But the actual difference goes deeper than just where your design ends up.

The RGB colour space can represent approximately 16.7 million colors, while CMYK covers a smaller range, typically around 16,000 printable colour combinations. This means if you design in RGB and convert to CMYK without checking your file, you will almost certainly lose some of the vibrancy your colors had on screen.

The bigger concern is that most people design everything in RGB, then expect the printer to figure it out. Printers will convert your file automatically, but the conversion may not match your intentions. Colours can shift, gradients can look banded, and dark tones can look muddy.

Designing in the correct colour mode from the beginning avoids all of this.

Understanding the difference between RGB vs CMYK with the color variations in digital and print media

Know Your Colour Modes Before You Start

The biggest takeaway from understanding RGB vs CMYK is this: the time to set your color mode is at the very beginning of a project, not after the design is done. Converting a finished RGB design to CMYK at the last minute often requires going back and adjusting colors manually, especially blues, purples, and highly saturated tones, to make sure they translate properly.

Professional designers plan for this from day one. If a project has both digital and print deliverables, you should either set up two separate files from the start or work in RGB and do a careful, supervised CMYK conversion with proper proofing.

At Line & Dot Studio, we work across digital and print because great design doesn’t live in just one place. Whether you need a complete brand identity, a packaging system, or a digital-first design that also translates beautifully in print, our team handles the details so you don’t have to.

FAQs about RGB vs CMYK

When to use RGB vs CMYK? +
Use RGB when your design will appear on any digital screen, websites, social media, apps, or video. Use CMYK when your design is going to be physically printed, such as business cards, brochures, packaging, or posters. The output medium determines the color mode.
Why does my RGB file print differently than what I see on screen? +
Because screens emit light and printers use ink. The RGB color space can show millions of colors that CMYK simply cannot replicate with physical ink on paper. When a printer converts your RGB file, it maps each color to the nearest printable equivalent, and that shift is often visible, especially in vivid blues, purples, and bright greens.
What does RGB stand for? +
RGB stands for Red, Green, Blue. It is the color model used by screens and digital displays, where these three light colors combine in different intensities to produce the full range of visible colors.
What does CMYK stand for? +
CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Key (Black). It is the color model used in professional printing, where four ink colors are layered on paper to reproduce color through ink absorption rather than light emission.
How to change RGB to CMYK in Photoshop? +
Open your file in Photoshop. Go to the top menu: Image → Mode → CMYK Color. Photoshop will warn you that this action may affect your appearance, click OK. After converting, review your colours carefully, especially any that were very bright or saturated in RGB, and adjust them as needed before exporting for print.
Can I use the same file for both digital and print? +
Not ideally. The safest approach is to maintain separate files, one in RGB for digital use and one in CMYK for print. If that's not possible, design in RGB first and do a careful, manually reviewed CMYK conversion rather than relying on automatic conversion at the printer.
What happens if I send an RGB file to a printer? +
Most printers will convert it automatically, but the conversion is not always accurate. You can end up with duller colors, unexpected color shifts, or inconsistencies between what you approved on screen and what gets printed. Always send print-ready CMYK files, ideally as a PDF with all fonts embedded.