So that's what my corel pms pallet spits out for pms 144C.Now their eps file reads Pantone 144 C, C11 M55 Y100 K1
One of the banes of my life is customers with colour matching. When they send you a photograph of something they have and say can you match this colour....Uh...they just sent a new version of their logo and you'll never guess! Color values are more off than before. Now their eps file reads Pantone 144 C, C11 M55 Y100 K1, Hex #DE8703. I told 'em we'll use the cmyk values and you get what you get. lol
Also sent them a snip from their own guidelines pdf. Corporate has to approve the design but the client is "designing" thru me. She wanted to do it herself in Canva but...
Don't even get me started!
Try https://imagecolorpicker.com/enOne of the banes of my life is customers with colour matching. When they send you a photograph of something they have and say can you match this colour....
I like this, but I wish they'd offer an 'average' color for the whole area within a sample region. What appears to be a solid color is made up of different colors stippled across an area, especially something stupid like a picture of stucco or EFIS.
The key is being able to make the customer understand that, without making them feel stupid, deceived, or combative. In my experience, they are either super laid back, or one of the prior 3.This kinda stuff always makes me laugh. We're talking about matching a color E X A C T L Y when the color charts can't do it, the websites can't do it...... nobody can do it and when you're in a different linda light, they change. Ya get as close to the color as possible, but 100% matching in impossible.
This or if you're using Flexi, use the color mapping tool. You pick the pantone you want to match, it prints out a chart of a range of colors around that pantone, you pick which one that looks like it the most, and then from that point on Flexi maps that color to that pantone. Pretty useful in these situations.Print a Pantone color chart and hang it on the wall. That's what you can print, pick something close. If what you want lies between two colors on the chart, choose the darker of the two. Never forget that what comes out of the printer is the truth, absolutely nothing else is.
You can do this in Photoshop in case you didn't know. In the eye dropper settings you can specify how many pixels to sample and it will give you the average color of the sample.I like this, but I wish they'd offer an 'average' color for the whole area within a sample region. What appears to be a solid color is made up of different colors stippled across an area, especially something stupid like a picture of stucco or EFIS.
Amen!This kinda stuff always makes me laugh. We're talking about matching a color E X A C T L Y when the color charts can't do it, the websites can't do it...... nobody can do it and when you're in a different linda light, they change. Ya get as close to the color as possible, but 100% matching in impossible.
I find when customers are mega fussy about a specific colour, normally because their 'designer' has designed it with a pantone colour then if you print out something close they can't tell the difference anyway.
And it always seems to be oranges or greens, which are the worst colours for CYMK printers to try and match!