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Trying to match a gray cut vinyl to a cmyk value. 55,46,46,11. Is there anyway to find out if there is a cut vinyl that is a very close match to this?
Medium Marine Gray (Avery 950)
Cool, thanks I'll check it out. How did you come up with that?
No, the CMYK will not be good there. You were correct to ask for a Pantone ID as that system is designed to communicate a color. However, because they are being so specific, they should have provided you with an actual Kodak gray card. Also, (me being facetious) anyone in upstate New York should be able to grab a Kodak gray card from their back pocket. (Kodak, RIT, and all.)So I asked if they happen to have a RGB/CMYK/Pantone? They gave me a CMYK so should be good there to just print the backgrounds. However we are going to be doing quite a lot of these, so would be much more efficient to just sheet some ACM with cut vinyl rather than print/lam/sheet.
That should be the ticket!
Seems Oracal could use the same course from RIT, unfortunately. Their recipes for RGB grey are telling among other things such as they don't include what RGB space they're using, etc.Oracal has this handy conversion chart that gets you close, but with every printer and profile creating slightly different results, we only consider these a starting point.
I looked at your CMYK mix in Corel Draw and looked at a vinyl color chart to see which was closest. But just from experience I was guessing that was going to be the closest. However, I doubt that it will be a specific perfect match to 18% neutral gray if you have to meet those specs. Usually when photographers have to make 18% gray walls, etc., they paint the wall. There are standard formulas for making 18% gray paint, and there's even $80/qt paint that is premade to 18% gray.
No, the CMYK will not be good there. You were correct to ask for a Pantone ID as that system is designed to communicate a color. However, because they are being so specific, they should have provided you with an actual Kodak gray card. Also, (me being facetious) anyone in upstate New York should be able to grab a Kodak gray card from their back pocket. (Kodak, RIT, and all.)
Anyway, you'll want a card if you don't already have one and know that most shops always have a few lying around. Don't trust CMYK values unless you know where they came from and where they're going. And yes, certain paint and certain media / substrates are available.
The fact they specify exposure is to be keyed off the 18% is incorrect (unless one knows the correction factor here) is not your concern but might explain why they gave you a CMYK value to begin with. IMO, they might use some lessons from RIT to better know some of their science.