Make a grdient of the dark blue and have that multiply over your light blue. This is the reason why if you design a logo that is going to both print and digital, always design in CMYK first, and then match your colors. RGB has a wider color gamut and can closer match the CMYK colors. 1 Upvote.
Jun 26, 2023. Definitely keep a "master" vector-based art file in CMYK mode for printing purposes. Changing colors to RGB and soft-proofing exported SVG files either in Illustrator or drag-dropped into a web browser window should be good enough. Straight conversions from CMYK to RGB usually work okay, but sometimes the results need to be
Create your desired settings in Photoshop (presumably you are using Photoshop), then use Bridge to sync your color [management] settings across the programs. What are the following settings for all programs involved: File > Document Color Mode in AI; Image > Mode in PS. Edit > Color Settings. View > Proof Setup. First go to File → Document Color Mode and Change it to CMYK or RGB - Depending on what you need. Then open the Color window - Window → Color (or hit F6) Click on the drop down menu in the top right. Switch from CMYK to RGB. You can then click on any object in the file and it should come up in RGB colors (or CMYK if switching vice-versa). If you select a Print preset, you will get Print swatches. If you decided that your Print preset should be in RGB, you will get Print CMYK Swatches that are converted to RGB. Choose in the Color Panel menu CMYK and choose any color swatch except White, you will see converted swatches. 1 Upvote.