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Looking to build a color swatch/pallet for illustrator that incorporates our go to colors for printing. Goal being easier more consistent workflow. Typically how we handle artwork is this:
Any raster images: print as is, adjust in photoshop if necessary for brightness/color.
Vector artwork supplied by customers: we suggest we print a sample for them to approve the colors before production (they usually skip this) print as is unless customer wants to tweak.
Vector artwork that we create: This is the area we are trying to improve upon. We switched from a roland printer to an epson several months back. With the roland we used to use the Roland Spot Colors for pretty much everything and it was a pretty simple system to work with for vector graphics. We had that system figured out pretty good where we knew the right spot color to match to pretty much every standard Oracal cut vinyl color (we liked this because it made it easy to color match to cut vinyl jobs and give a good but not too large of color choices that are pretty standard in the industry). Downside to this with the Roland spot colors is that the spot colors don't look right on computer screen, so they would look wrong in customer proofs. So What we ultimately did was do the initial designing with an illustrator rgb swatch to proof with customers. Then that artwork would go to our print dept. and they would swap out whatever colors needed to be swapped with spot colors for best print quality. This system wasn't perfect at all, kind of a PIA but the roland spot colors did print better than anything else we would try for a lot of colors.
Since getting the S80 (which we love) we have faced a couple issues with how we handle this. We have been doing the same things for proofing and sending artwork to the print dept. But they don't have the spot colors to fall back on. So we find ourselves trying to match our output to our old Roland swatch books. We don't like this because the epson can print much nicer colors. So when a customer tells me on the phone that they want a nice burgundy or whatever color, I want to give them that, not a close match to what we used to be able to produce. Just feels like going backwards. But I also don't want to have to do a bunch of test prints all the time either. We've tried using a pantone book and swatch we have, and printed a pantone chart with the epson. This works, but not in love with it. Just so many colors to choose from, plus through some of our test printing we can get better colors than some of the pantones. I don't know maybe we just need to get used to it more?
But what I'd ultimately like is this:
To create a color pallet for illustrator that has spot colors that match to Oracals cut vinyl (or 3m/avery) colors and produce our best looking/closet match to the cut vinyls. And that these spot colors we create look reasonably close on screen so that we can use them for customer proofs and printing. This isn't as easy to do though without having something like the roland spot colors. Will require a lot of test printing. Have tried matching from the pantone chart, but seems that we can get better colors from our own tweaking than what that chart spit out.
Anybody have a similar system? Better system? Suggestions?
Any raster images: print as is, adjust in photoshop if necessary for brightness/color.
Vector artwork supplied by customers: we suggest we print a sample for them to approve the colors before production (they usually skip this) print as is unless customer wants to tweak.
Vector artwork that we create: This is the area we are trying to improve upon. We switched from a roland printer to an epson several months back. With the roland we used to use the Roland Spot Colors for pretty much everything and it was a pretty simple system to work with for vector graphics. We had that system figured out pretty good where we knew the right spot color to match to pretty much every standard Oracal cut vinyl color (we liked this because it made it easy to color match to cut vinyl jobs and give a good but not too large of color choices that are pretty standard in the industry). Downside to this with the Roland spot colors is that the spot colors don't look right on computer screen, so they would look wrong in customer proofs. So What we ultimately did was do the initial designing with an illustrator rgb swatch to proof with customers. Then that artwork would go to our print dept. and they would swap out whatever colors needed to be swapped with spot colors for best print quality. This system wasn't perfect at all, kind of a PIA but the roland spot colors did print better than anything else we would try for a lot of colors.
Since getting the S80 (which we love) we have faced a couple issues with how we handle this. We have been doing the same things for proofing and sending artwork to the print dept. But they don't have the spot colors to fall back on. So we find ourselves trying to match our output to our old Roland swatch books. We don't like this because the epson can print much nicer colors. So when a customer tells me on the phone that they want a nice burgundy or whatever color, I want to give them that, not a close match to what we used to be able to produce. Just feels like going backwards. But I also don't want to have to do a bunch of test prints all the time either. We've tried using a pantone book and swatch we have, and printed a pantone chart with the epson. This works, but not in love with it. Just so many colors to choose from, plus through some of our test printing we can get better colors than some of the pantones. I don't know maybe we just need to get used to it more?
But what I'd ultimately like is this:
To create a color pallet for illustrator that has spot colors that match to Oracals cut vinyl (or 3m/avery) colors and produce our best looking/closet match to the cut vinyls. And that these spot colors we create look reasonably close on screen so that we can use them for customer proofs and printing. This isn't as easy to do though without having something like the roland spot colors. Will require a lot of test printing. Have tried matching from the pantone chart, but seems that we can get better colors from our own tweaking than what that chart spit out.
Anybody have a similar system? Better system? Suggestions?