Hello,
When opening the same pantone solid coated colours from 2 different versions of the books they look visually quite different. For example a customer has sent me artwork that has 7546C in it from the "previous version" book. If I choose that same colour from the Pantone+ Solid Coated-V4 book it looks a lot darker. The darker version visually looks coser to the actual PMS book i have here and that would also match the mixing system version of the actual ink. But if a customer is choosing a colour based on what they see on the screen and dont have a physical colour book this could cause some issues.
Seems very odd that the colour wouldn't look the same across different versionsof the books.
Are you comparing actual printed color books or comparing color books to the screen?
The Pantone 7546C color and 7546 in the Pantone + Solid Coated-V4 are different computer palette.
The reality is that the printer will use the formula printed on the swatch from the book so you would need to compare those mixing formulas from the two books to know if the colors are the same.
What you may try is making sure that CorelDRAW is set to use LAB for spot color conversions and convert the 7546C color and the Pantone +Solid Coated-V4 version of 7546 to CMYK and see if they convert to the same CMYK.
If it does not convert to the same CMYK colors I would suspect that they're different colors. If they convert to the same CMYK numbers I would assume that they are the same color and that the difference in the palettes is just a display change.
Just remember that there is no difference between C and U pallets for the actual printer they use the same ink to print onncoated as they do for uncoated paper.
The C and U pallets are only for the computer display simulation and will produce different CMYK conversions in the computer.
Hello, I'm comparing what I am visually seeing on the screen in corel. I understand that older physical books can fade a bit so comparing an older book to a new one can show some variations.
I thought I'd attached a corel file to my original post where you could see the 2 differing colours. I just drew a box and filled with 7546C from the previous version book then another from the V4 book and you can see quite a difference.
when i go into fill colour and change over to the colour viewer tab the CMYK breakdowns are different. This makes no sense to me. Wouldnt the same PMS colour be the same regardless of which solid coated book it's from? Don't the newer books just have extra colours but existing colours stay the same? Theyre both 7546C from the solid coated book. Just one is from the V4 book.
Sorry i don't understand what you mean about the LAB spot colours?
When it comes to printing it's not an issue beause i print out a formula from a program and the i can compare the printed colour on a shirt to the phycial solid coated book.
the potential issue is if a customer sends us artwork and they've got colours from the previous version book and they may not have a physical book so can only go by what they are seeing on their computer screens. with this 7546C the artwork version looked a lot lighter being from the previous version book. When i brought up the V4 version it was much darker. I spoke to the customer and ended up printing 7545C as the V4 version looked like a closer match to the 7546C from the previous book version when viewed on the screen.
Ok this is going to be a bit complicated. First remember that Pantone sets their colors and controls what color they will convert to when changing to LAB color space and on to CMYK
CorelDRAW by default uses the process controlled by Pantone ergo, LAB color space to control spot color conversions to CMYK. The process is spot color-to LAB color space-to your chosen CMYK color space. The CMYK numders will be different for different CMYK color spaces.
So if under the tools menu, color management, default tab the spot colors conversion is set to LAB and the two versions of 7546C and 7546 coated from the Pantone+V4 solid coated convert to different CMYK values to the same CMYK color space then there are 3 possibilities.
The first is the CorelDRAW has a bug, the second is that Pantone made a mistake in the conversion table of one or both palettes, the third is that Pantone actually sees the two colors even though they share the same number 7546 and are coated as different colors. Pantone not only controls the conversion to CMYK but how they display on screen, this display process is the only reason for coated and uncoated Pantone palettes to simulate uncoated or coated paper.
Comparing the mixing formulas from the two books the C book and the solid coated +V4 book or calling Pantone are the only ways to know for sure.
I'll check and see what my system tells me but I'm betting you found a Pantone error that Corel simply passes along. It's not the first time.
After doing some checking the best I could find was that the +V4 palette is correct and the C version was printed and digitized incorrectly.
Thanks for your help David. I've only noticed it a few times. I always make sure i go by the V4 colour book when matching artwork customers send me to a pantone colour. It's rare that a customer sends artwork that already has a chosen PMS from the previous version book. Most art comes as iillustrator files in CMYK then i go over to the pantone book to find a match.
Pantone colors have really gotten to be a PITA, I double checked on line and Pantone has made a mess of things, they list colors and conversions but no color engines or spaces only color models. It's like a submarine with screen doors.