CMYK to LCH
Color Convert Engine
Enter a color in any supported format; the engine outputs every other color space.
Input Mode
Accepts #RGB or #RRGGBB, with or without #.
Preview
#1E40AF
Preview uses the sRGB color space.
Output — all color spaces
How to use
- Enter CMYK percentages as supplied by print templates, remember gamut limits versus RGB displays, then sanity-check with a calibrated proof when possible.
- RGB screens cannot reproduce the entire CMYK gamut—expect visible shifts for saturated ink builds.
- Treat screen preview as guidance and defer final judgment to print proofs or vendor ICC workflows.
FAQ
What is CMYK to LCH used for?
CMYK to LCH is used when your source color is expressed as cyan, magenta, yellow, and black ink percentages typical of print specs but your destination expects LCH (lightness, chroma, hue) cylindrical LAB coordinates suited to wide-gamut workflows—common when aligning design tools, CSS, print specs, or APIs.
Is my data uploaded?
No. Processing runs locally in your browser.
Will CMYK match my printer exactly?
Conversion math is deterministic, but printed output depends on stock, inkset, and profiles—always validate with a physical proof for brand-critical jobs.
Introduction
CMYK describes subtractive ink mixtures—cyan, magenta, yellow, and black—as percentages for print-ready artwork rather than light emitted on a display. That is what we treat as the from (CMYK) color encoding on this page.
LCH is LAB written in cylinders—lightness, chroma (color strength), and hue—so you can adjust vividness and hue while staying in a perceptual model. That is the to (LCH) encoding you get after conversion.
A CMYK to LCH converter bridges them when your pipeline outputs CMYK but the next step expects LCH—without redoing the coordinate math by hand.
What is CMYK to LCH?
CMYK to LCH maps colors described in cyan, magenta, yellow, and black ink percentages typical of print specs into LCH (lightness, chroma, hue) cylindrical LAB coordinates suited to wide-gamut workflows. The perceptual aim is the same color expressed with different coordinates—ideal when downstream systems disagree on notation.
Key Features
Fast conversion helps when you are juggling CMYK inputs against LCH consumers in the same sprint.
Live preview catches transcription mistakes early, especially when channels have different ranges or units.
Copy-ready output reduces slack-and-paste errors moving from spreadsheets or PDF specs into code.
Common Use Cases
- Shipping UI tokens where APIs expose CMYK but theme files require LCH.
- Preparing brand palettes for mixed pipelines—web RGB alongside print CMYK or perceptual LAB QA.
- Debugging divergent pickers by exporting one canonical mix and re-importing it elsewhere.
Best Practices
- Normalize inputs (confirm units and ranges) before trusting downstream diffs.
- Compare previews on both light and dark chrome when contrast ratios matter for accessibility.
- Bookmark the inverse LCH to CMYK when you frequently round-trip edits.
Related tools
These complement CMYK to LCH when you are iterating palettes under real UI constraints:
- Color Converter — Jump to any supported pair from the suite hub.
- LCH to CMYK — Reverse direction when edits bounce between teams.
- CMYK to HEX — Nearby conversion from the same CMYK source when you need another output format.
- Color Picker — Dial or sample a color visually, then route it through the converter chain.