23 Sept 2022, 19:30

@Nyrryl-Cadiz
Hi Nyrryl, thank you for your reply!
I can see there are quite a few benefits to working in Photoshop vs Procreate. For me shifting entirely to Photoshop would mean investing in a new drawing tablet unfortunately. I might consider biting the bullet at some point and investing in a cintiq or something similar but I can't really justify the cost at the moment.
Even if I was working exclusively in photoshop working entirely in CMYK feels very limiting to me. Blend modes are quite a big part of my process working digitally and not using them feels like shooting myself in the foot. Also these days even if you are creating work primarily for print you also want things to look good on screen too for use in online portfolios, social media etc.

I feel like there must be a middle ground. Your suggestion of using CMYK palette is a good shout. It's also possible to see a preview of how your file would look in CMYK in photoshop without converting it. This makes sure you aren't straying too far out of the CMYK colour gamut while still taking full advantage of the vivid colour palette RGB allows you. I sometimes do this a few times during my work in progress on my procreate files. I suppose maybe clients don't trust illustrators to do this so they'd rather just get the files in CMYK and know the colours are what the artist intended. (Although as I mentioned above I have no issue with sending CMYK files to clients it's the need for both CMYK and layers that's giving me a headache haha)

I've tried googling this a few times and I can see there's a bit of a hot debate on the topic of working in CMYK vs RGB so I'm not sure there is one correct answer, I suppose lot of it comes down to what your process is like.