About color channels


    Every Photoshop image has one or more channels, each storing information about color elements in the image. The number of default color channels in an image depends on its color mode. For example, a CMYK image has at least four channels, one each for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black information. Think of a channel as analogous to a plate in the printing process, with a separate plate applying each layer of color.

    In addition to these default color channels, extra channels, called alpha channels, can be added to an image for storing and editing selections as masks, and spot color channels can be added to add spot color plates for printing. (See Storing masks in alpha channels and Adding spot colors (Photoshop).)

    An image can have up to 56 channels. By default, Bitmap-mode, grayscale, duotone, and indexed-color images have one channel; RGB and Lab images have three; and CMYK images have four. You can add channels to all image types except Bitmap-mode images.



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