Pre-Press- color resolution ( Pixel depth )
Colour resolution (or pixel depth) refers to the software’s ability to record colour differences. It has nothing to do with the resolution of area-related detail. The relationship between the number of grey levels or colours that a pixel can represent and the number of bits or bytes of computer memory needed to store it is listed given below. The minimum requirement is eight bits per colour (one byte), but often scanners are advertised as being 10-, 12- or even 16-bits per colour. Colour resolution: bits per pixel 1 bit per pixel = black or white 8 bits per pixel = 256 shades or colours 24 bits per pixel = 256 red 256 blue 256 green = 16.7 million colours each extra bit doubles the number of tones or shades that can be expressed the software convention is an 8-bit environment 10- or 12-bit scanners = redundancy of bits for tone transformations