If you have installed the currently existing Separate or Separate+ plugin (it’s in the gimp-plugin-registry package) you’ll find it in the menus under "Image"… but the separation portion of the plugin crashes when you run it. usr/share/color/icc/Adobe, but you do not have to.Īdditionally, on Debian (and presumably Ubuntu) you can sudo apt install icc-profiles to get more color profiles to choose from. I recommend making a subdirectory to keep them straight, e.g. You can get that by using wget or curl:Īnd then unzipping the contents into /usr/share/color/icc. Luckily, the color profile for Windows will work just fine. If you’re on Linux, the Adobe Linux RPM package you’ll see linked to here and there across the web no longer exists. Since you’re going to be working with different color profiles, you’ll need to get (and install) those. I found (after a lot of wading about through forum threads) is that there’s two ways to get CMYK separated files with current (2022, version 2.10.*) versions. While there was an old plugin and workaround, that hasn’t been ported to the newer versions of GIMP. If you’re not an artist or have had to work with print products, you may not know the difference between RGB and CMYK DesignBro has a good explainer of the difference. One of the reasons that people stick with Photoshop instead of using the free and open source and crossplatform "GIMP" alternative is because the latter has historically had issues exporting to CMYK for print preprocessing.
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