You can use blending
modes, the Hard Mix effect, or the Soft Mix effect to mix overlapping
colors.
- Blending modes
-
Provide many options for controlling overlapping colors,
and should always be used in place of Hard Mix and Soft Mix for
artwork containing spot colors, patterns, gradients, text, or other
complex artwork.
- Hard Mix effect
-
Combines
colors by choosing the highest value of each of the color components.
For example, if Color 1 is 20% cyan, 66% magenta, 40% yellow, and
0% black; and Color 2 is 40% cyan, 20% magenta, 30% yellow, and
10% black, the resulting hard color is 40% cyan, 66% magenta, 40%
yellow, and 10% black.
- Soft Mix effect
-
Makes the
underlying colors visible through the overlapping artwork, and then
divides the image into its component faces. You specify the percentage
of visibility you want in the overlapping colors.
You
can apply blending modes to individual objects, whereas you must
apply the Hard Mix and Soft Mix effects to entire groups or layers.
Blending modes affect both the fill and stroke of an object, whereas
the Hard and Soft Mix effects result in removal of an object’s stroke.
Note: In
most cases, applying the Hard Mix or Soft Mix effect to objects
painted using a mix of process and spot colors converts the color
to CMYK. In the case of mixing a non-global process RGB color with
a spot RGB color, all spot colors are converted to a non-global
process RGB color.