Jim Doggett
New Member
Correct. I think you're starting to get a sense of where printing has gone since Gutenberg printed a Bible. Pantone's glory days were when 2-color sheet-fed printers sprang up in every town in America, and elsewhere. Cover or text stock; coated and uncoated.
Web offset came came into vogue, and then evolved and became more affordable. Flood gloss, ultra varnish, flood dull, brightness, opacity, etc., etc. Companies (smart ones) began to wonder if busting their humps to match a color was cost-justified, or even if it's that important. Turns out, not much; it's a supporting cast element. And close is absolutely adequate, for this reason: it's tough to own the color.
Orange and Blue; is it ING or AT&T/Cingular?
Now for shape and position, which I mentioned mattered more about 20 posts ago (way more, in fact):
Once-bitten apple (Mac)
Swoosh (Nike)
Text with notched "o" (Microsoft)
Color, not so important. And if you use it effectively, others follow rapidly. Orange is the color of the new millenium, in that regard, to the extreme ... a bazzillion companies got on that bandwagon. So what company is Orange? Answer: a bunch of them. But the ones that come to mind do so because they were branded in ways that matter.
Pantone's color of the century, I don't recall ... but they have a new color of the year, every decade and so on ... which a couple people who work for Pantone can name without having to look it up. They fell in love with their product, got too attached and forgot to fall in love with the market. They're now in major difficulty. If a company doesn't acquire them, they'll be gone in a year, if the last rights being said about them is to be believed.
I don't wish that. If it would save a single Pantone employee's job, I'd recant everything I've said here. But this thread isn't nearly that important. At best, maybe some who read it will be better able to deal with the lingering effects of expectations brought on from an antiquated system (Pantone).
Next question, please.
Jim
Web offset came came into vogue, and then evolved and became more affordable. Flood gloss, ultra varnish, flood dull, brightness, opacity, etc., etc. Companies (smart ones) began to wonder if busting their humps to match a color was cost-justified, or even if it's that important. Turns out, not much; it's a supporting cast element. And close is absolutely adequate, for this reason: it's tough to own the color.
Orange and Blue; is it ING or AT&T/Cingular?
Now for shape and position, which I mentioned mattered more about 20 posts ago (way more, in fact):
Once-bitten apple (Mac)
Swoosh (Nike)
Text with notched "o" (Microsoft)
Color, not so important. And if you use it effectively, others follow rapidly. Orange is the color of the new millenium, in that regard, to the extreme ... a bazzillion companies got on that bandwagon. So what company is Orange? Answer: a bunch of them. But the ones that come to mind do so because they were branded in ways that matter.
Pantone's color of the century, I don't recall ... but they have a new color of the year, every decade and so on ... which a couple people who work for Pantone can name without having to look it up. They fell in love with their product, got too attached and forgot to fall in love with the market. They're now in major difficulty. If a company doesn't acquire them, they'll be gone in a year, if the last rights being said about them is to be believed.
I don't wish that. If it would save a single Pantone employee's job, I'd recant everything I've said here. But this thread isn't nearly that important. At best, maybe some who read it will be better able to deal with the lingering effects of expectations brought on from an antiquated system (Pantone).
Next question, please.
Jim
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