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Color Separation in printing refers to the process of separating the color components of an image or file into the four process colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black).

In printing, color balance refers to the correct combination of the four printing colors (CMYK) necessary to reproduce a photograph or design without a color cast.
A complementary color is a color that is on the exact opposite side of the color wheel. When complementary colors are placed next to each other, they appear to “pop.” The sets of standard complementary colors are: Blue-Orange, Red-Green, and Yellow-Purple.

A vector image is an image composed of points and paths to form a polygon that can be scaled to any size. An SVG is a common vector image file type.
A TIFF is an image format for representing scanned images or other large bitmap files. It is designed to be compatible with most applications.
Raw format is uncompressed data. This means the file has never been altered, compressed, or manipulated.