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Dark slide explaining RGB-for-digital and CMYK-for-print, with an intro column left and two stacked definition cards (Digital, Printed Matter) right.
Summary
A color-mode explainer on near-black: an "Intro" headline and rationale column on the left, two stacked dark cards on the right defining "Digital" (RGB/HEX) and "Printed Matter" (CMYK).
Visual description
Near-black (#1E1E2A) full bleed, with "DIGITAL VS. PRINTED", "COLOR PALETTE" and "BRAND GUIDELINES" labels along the top. Left column: a cream "Intro" heading over two short paragraphs noting that color is core to identity and is delivered as ASE files for design apps. Right column: two slightly lighter charcoal cards stacked vertically. The top card, "Digital", explains RGB and HEX usage for screens, with sub-rows for "RGB" and "HEX". The bottom card, "Printed Matter", explains CMYK for print, with a "CMYK" sub-row. Each card title sits large at its top with body copy beneath.
Key takeaway
Separating digital and print color guidance into two parallel definition cards beside a single intro column, so the RGB-versus-CMYK distinction is structured rather than buried in a paragraph.
Reuse notes
A clean way to handle the digital-vs-print color-mode page in a guideline deck. The two-card pattern scales if you add spot or Pantone values. Keep it near the palette spec page that lists the actual values.
From this deck: Mash digital vs printed color intro
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