Pantone Color Charts
Pantone Color Charts
Pantone Color Charts
Did you know that the Pantone® company, in those early days, manufactured varnishes to cover
the nails of these ladies?
Today we know them mainly for their color charts used in the field of printing and industry.
Because if these "Pantoniers" are useful for colorists, they have become reference points in the
field of color.
They are used to communicate, research and control colors.
But beware ! misused, they could cause a lot of problems ...
PANTONE Colors
The principle of the best possible color rendering, developed in printing with hexachromy (6 CMYK
+ Orange and Green colors), has led to the development of a palette of 13 basic colors.
These 13 basic colors were supplemented, in the years following their development, by 5 other
colors.
What means that today, the pantone color chart, is a variation of 18 basic colors:
Rose (pink) ;
Violet (purple) ;
Vert (green).
Violet
The advantage of PANTONE inks for a printer, is to print colors which cannot be reproduced in
CMYK or to carry out prints in the field of packaging.
But beware, the use of additional colors in traditional printing at a cost ...
Inkjet printers are therefore capable of reproducing a much larger color space than an offset
printer which prints with CMYK inks for example.
So the PANTONE color chart can only be used as a reference to print a color.
The question we can ask ourselves is: Is the printer capable of reproducing all the colors of a
PANTONE color chart?
Remember that the Pantone C, U or M color charts are lexicons of additional inks intended for
traditional printing.
Now let's compare the profile of an Epson SC-F10000 printer using sublimation inks for printing on
polyester fabric, we can see that the Pantone TCX color chart is more suitable for this printing
technology.
We can also see that there are colors from the color chart (in the blue-green) that we will not be
able to reproduce.
But there are also a lot of colors that are not in the Pantone TCX color chart that we could
reproduce (Green, Yellow, Red, Blue eg)
Pantone TCX vs Profil Epson F10000 sublimation textile
In conclusion, if you want to use Pantone color charts to define the colors you want to reproduce,
use suitable color charts.
Otherwise ask your printer to print the color charts for you under normal printing conditions and
use the colors provided by your printer.
The color space generally used to define a Pantone color is the Lab because it is an independent
color mode which relies on the perception of the human eye.
Paper swatches
The only purpose of paper color charts is to help choose a color, but they do not claim to be
precise enough to allow color control.
The visual control also depends on the state of your Pantonier, the light environment in which you
will visualize your colors and ... on you!
Because you probably know, color is subjective.
From the first day of use, your color charts can have significant deviations. Colors printed on a
Pantone® color chart cannot have absolute values and are necessarily reproduced with tolerances.
Without forgetting the updates.
The current Pantone® solid coated color chart contains 2663 colors, and yours?
So digital?
It is indeed the most reliable solution because by using a spectrophotometer and an adapted
software that brings us the following advantages:
- Measurement precision
- Use of spectral values or official Lab
- No interpretation of color
- Control of conditions under which the measurement is carried out.
- Precise quantification of the difference between the measured color and the reference values.
- Recording and sharing of information for better communication.
- Update of color charts
- More reliable and faster shade search.
- Creation and use of personalized color charts (samples of leathers, fabrics, vinyl, etc.)
Pantone + Color Bridge swatches
Attention danger ! these swatches do not contain the values of the reference Pantone colors, but
the Pantone colors converted to CMYK.
So this gives reduced colors to the CMYK space, it can only be useful for offset printing to preview
what your Pantone color will give you in CMYK if you will not be using an additional Pantone color.
The question is:
- Is the CMYK space that my printer will use the same as the one used to convert Pantone colors on
my Color Bridge swatch?
- Do I need a Color Bridge CMYK swatch when printing on a 12 color inkjet printer?
Similar articles:
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/de-la-creation-a-limpression-episode-10-2
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/from-creation-to-printing-episode-9
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/de-la-creation-a-limpression-episode-8-2
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/from-creation-to-printing-episode-6
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/from-creation-to-printing-episode-5
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/from-creation-to-printing-episode-2
https://www.coraye.com/en/posts/from-creation-to-printing-episode-1
Révision #3
Créé Wed, Dec 29, 2021 1:28 PM par Lionel WETTEREN
Mis à jour Wed, Dec 29, 2021 2:17 PM par Lionel WETTEREN