View Full Version : pantone choices in illustrator
tylerboyo
Mar 10, 2007, 01:32 PM
hey, i got a big project for my deisng course in uni, we need to use pantone colours, so basiclaly choosing them before we develop the idea too much. what i want to know, is how to i apply the pantone colors, from the booklet, to illustrator and photoshop. i know how to do it in quark, was just wondering with the adobe suite.
thanks in advance
Blue Velvet
Mar 10, 2007, 01:38 PM
Illustrator: Menu: Window>Swatch Libraries>Pantone... 9 kinds in CS1
Photoshop: A bit more problematic as for genuine spot colours, you'll have to work in PSD, EPSs or PDFs or even DCS... unless you work in greyscale/bitmap and colour the files up in your page-layout software. Anyway, the Pantone libraries are available under 'custom' in the Colour Picker. Or in the Swatches palette, click the top-right little triangle...
tylerboyo
Mar 10, 2007, 01:40 PM
many thanks blue velvet, appreciated. thanks.
AlexisV
Mar 16, 2007, 11:05 AM
You're best off sticking with solid coated colours :)
Sdashiki
Mar 16, 2007, 11:27 AM
You're best off sticking with solid coated colours :)
not if the paper and final product are to be matte and not glossy.
TJIrwin
Mar 16, 2007, 01:13 PM
not if the paper and final product are to be matte and not glossy.
Agreed. Found that one out the hard way.
Sdashiki
Mar 16, 2007, 02:06 PM
Agreed. Found that one out the hard way.
this is why they have those fancy but uber expensive books and card samples of every pantone color. my work supplies me with some, and they said its only been here since last year, and I was like, are you freakin serious? All we do is use Pantones!
oh, and they are only good for like 1 year, or the colors fade. (so the company says...)
TJIrwin
Mar 17, 2007, 10:11 AM
oh, and they are only good for like 1 year, or the colors fade. (so the company says...)
I got mine wrapped in a bing bag, in the box, at the back of my drawer. I'd love to see the colour fade its way out of that one!
Mookamoo
Mar 19, 2007, 07:27 PM
Remember if you specify a Pantone colour and then print it in CYMK it will look totally different.
Sdashiki
Mar 20, 2007, 09:00 AM
Remember if you specify a Pantone colour and then print it in CYMK it will look totally different.
not if the company printing it notices your swatches are marked as Pantone colors, then they will print at that pantone color, just like your swatch should.
AlexisV
Apr 3, 2007, 12:04 PM
You're best off sticking with solid coated colours
not if the paper and final product are to be matte and not glossy.
I'll rephrase :)
You're best off sticking with solid coated ... for this job ie. a uni project which isn't going to professional print.
Uncoated will look a bit washed out printed to inkjet or colour laser.
not if the company printing it notices your swatches are marked as Pantone colors, then they will print at that pantone color, just like your swatch should.
But you'd have to decide spot colours and process colours before hand, when getting quotes initially.
TheAtwookie
Apr 4, 2007, 10:48 AM
Remember if you specify a Pantone colour and then print it in CYMK it will look totally different.
However, if you have access to a Pantone swatch book, there should be a CYMK "equivilant" listed. I've used those in the past for some of my smaller jobs where I didn't want to pay for pantone inks and it worked fairly well.
aricher
Apr 5, 2007, 09:33 AM
there should be a CYMK "equivilant" listed.
CMYK not CYMK
TheAtwookie
Apr 5, 2007, 01:57 PM
CMYK not CYMK
Whoops! I had a momentary bout of Lysdexia.
zero2dash
Apr 5, 2007, 05:29 PM
Remember if you specify a Pantone colour and then print it in CYMK it will look totally different.
On 4 color press/4 color process...yes.
On a digital copier...no, not if the copier has a native Pantone system in place. We have 2 digital color copiers (which are CMYK obviously) where I work that both have PMS color matching and print PMS colors correctly and true to color.
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