Bill W
Well-known member
Greetings,
I have seen similar, but no exactly the same, queries. Example, CMYK value for PMS 2587;
In CS5 they were c=59%, m=66%, yandk=0%
In CS6 2587 they are C=57.64%, m=83.15% yandk=0% when color settings is Prepress2
In CS6 change color settings to Emulate IL v6 and 2587 is now c=62.34%, m=73.91%, y=1.88%, k=0.26.
The fact that the color looks different on screen when opening a IL5 file that has PMS 2587 in CS6 compared to creating a new element in CS6 with PMS 2587, is somewhat concerning. But what could really cause a problem is if we created a new PMS 2587 item in CS6, converted it to CMYK and then expected it to match on press what we printed using a CS5 conversion in the past.
I realize that the solid coated library is now Pantone + and based on Lab values, a good thing. Other than changing the CMYK values after conversion to the CS5 values is there anyway to fix this potential "landmine" waiting to be stepped on at press.
I have seen similar, but no exactly the same, queries. Example, CMYK value for PMS 2587;
In CS5 they were c=59%, m=66%, yandk=0%
In CS6 2587 they are C=57.64%, m=83.15% yandk=0% when color settings is Prepress2
In CS6 change color settings to Emulate IL v6 and 2587 is now c=62.34%, m=73.91%, y=1.88%, k=0.26.
The fact that the color looks different on screen when opening a IL5 file that has PMS 2587 in CS6 compared to creating a new element in CS6 with PMS 2587, is somewhat concerning. But what could really cause a problem is if we created a new PMS 2587 item in CS6, converted it to CMYK and then expected it to match on press what we printed using a CS5 conversion in the past.
I realize that the solid coated library is now Pantone + and based on Lab values, a good thing. Other than changing the CMYK values after conversion to the CS5 values is there anyway to fix this potential "landmine" waiting to be stepped on at press.