With the duotone Lincoln image, why were the purple and gold colors mixed together in Photoshop to produce a subtle effect, but they weren't mixed together in the InDesign duotone which produced a harsher, graphic appearance? Why were the results vastly different between the two programs even though they were both duotones and used the same colors? Shouldn't they have looked exactly the same? If a client asks for a duotone image, which method would be they be referring to: the subtle Photoshop duotone or the graphic InDesign duotone? Thanks for this helpful video.
With the duotone Lincoln image, why were the purple and gold colors mixed together in Photoshop to produce a subtle effect, but they weren't mixed together in the InDesign duotone which produced a harsher, graphic appearance? Why were the results vastly different between the two programs even though they were both duotones and used the same colors? Shouldn't they have looked exactly the same? If a client asks for a duotone image, which method would be they be referring to: the subtle Photoshop duotone or the graphic InDesign duotone? Thanks for this helpful video.
I gained a lot of knowledge from this video. Thank you so much! 🧡
Glad it was helpful!
Great video, as always. You do have a typo (extra word) starting at 4:52, though.
Who's here from UMGC? 🙋♂️