Bentley Sign
New Member
Any suggestions on matching a Gray Pms color. My grays always have a green tint. We stay busy with wraps and signs, but try to stay away from gray. Any suggestions would be great.
Joel
Joel
and take your samples outdoors just to make sure
If you are using Versaworks RIP, you can use one of the grays in Roland Color System. Short of building your own color management system, it is probably the easiest way to get predictability in printing grays.
Thanks for this tip. I consider myself quite versed in colormatching with verseaworks, using mainly my own methods. I have recently had problems in hitting a gray that matched a 21%K printed in grayscale on high quality photo paper from a laser printer at like 2540dpi or something (took a while to figure that out..). My media certainly did not match the whiteness or brightness of supplied media, in fact it was almost slightly blue-gray (started with arlon DPF 5490M I believe). I don't recall exactly what lam we use, but I put some on blank media to compare the difference, and it definately shifted hues towards yellow (fluorescent lighting... was the same as where the finished labels were to be installed). Anyway, I could not get a gray that didn't seem to look green compared to the sample. Maybe the combination of blue media and yellow laminate make green grays? Most likely the versaworks colors will help and printing on better media does also help.
Fortunately our custimer understood that we couldn't hit it dead on, but also understood the label would be very high quality, and would look consistant on their machines when they re-order. These were serial number labels for $2.5 machines. Oh yeah, anybody else printing scannable barcodes from a roland?
Thanks for this tip. I consider myself quite versed in colormatching with verseaworks, using mainly my own methods. I have recently had problems in hitting a gray that matched a 21%K printed in grayscale on high quality photo paper from a laser printer at like 2540dpi or something (took a while to figure that out..). My media certainly did not match the whiteness or brightness of supplied media, in fact it was almost slightly blue-gray (started with arlon DPF 5490M I believe). I don't recall exactly what lam we use, but I put some on blank media to compare the difference, and it definately shifted hues towards yellow (fluorescent lighting... was the same as where the finished labels were to be installed). Anyway, I could not get a gray that didn't seem to look green compared to the sample. Maybe the combination of blue media and yellow laminate make green grays? Most likely the versaworks colors will help and printing on better media does also help.
Fortunately our custimer understood that we couldn't hit it dead on, but also understood the label would be very high quality, and would look consistant on their machines when they re-order. These were serial number labels for $2.5 machines. Oh yeah, anybody else printing scannable barcodes from a roland?
It is mainly do to the white shift of different types of media... The white of the media is the light source for the ink that is laid down. This is where you get your largest shifts of color. Grays coming out green, red, etc. Since you don't build your own profiles on each of your medias, you will get a shift in color because the RIP essentially doesn't know the whiteness of the media to compensate the amount of ink it's laying down.
When you run 50% K through a rip, it will convert it to a CMYK color (look closely at the ink droplets with a loop). This is to maximize the efficiency in ink usage in combination with the GCR setting when the ink gets heavy into the black.
Any other solution is a "half-assed" unacceptable solution... People spend all of this money on all of this equipment and then skimp on the proper tools to run the equipment.
GCR = Gray Component Replacement. This controls how and where CMY inks are replaced by K ink in colors approaching and including black.