The actual number of the Pantone colors in gamut is really not relevant, even if it was above 80%. What's important is the percentage of "my" spot colors. That's all that counts. PMS 354 may be in gamut with a certain ink set but if I don't print PMS 354, that doesn't help me.
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? When talking Expanded gamut we really need to rid this conversation of PANTONE and spot colors.
Last time I checked, there were still only (2) color reproduction systems in existence:
Additive: RGB
Subtractive: CMYK
PANTONE
is not a color reproduction system. It's simply a collection of spot colors. Take at look at their latest Pantone'
+' book. Anyone can interpolate more colors from the same 12 bases to create thousands more 'colors' (i.e. cans of ink) & more landfill. They call this innovation? Whoopty-doo!
From what I understand, an 'Expanded Gamut' system should be based on a color separation method & ink set that expands the CMYK gamut thereby improving on the known print problems:
• C,M,Y trap errors (improve 'saturated' RGB hues).
• C,M ink hue/contamination errors (improve orange, green & blue hues).
Based on these known 'problems', why can't the color gurus (SUN CHEMICAL, ESKO, KODAK, GRACOL, FOGRA, ISO - who is this 7-color authority?) simply quantify/agree on one 7-color ink set? While it may not be perfect, at least the software, proofing vendors, printers, ink suppliers and most importantly BRAND OWNERS will have a chance knowing what they're all aiming for on a global scale.
ESKO created a rod for their own back by offering a expanded gamut 'choice' in the first place. It's quite a unique business model indeed, you sell Equinox for $50,000+ 'consulting fees' to help the prepress/printer waste their valuable press time printing color charts to invent in-house expanded gamut system(s) & ink sets? What are they actually buying again? Please don't say, 'automation & global standardization' (which is what the BRAND OWNERS want).
ESKO should have worked with SUN CHEMICAL (or whoever) and mandated (1) 7-color standard from the gecko. Too late now, as usual ESKO promise everyone everything & deliver nothing. Of course, they still keep cashing the checks - LOL
It's not rocket science, unless the industry can lock down the output colorants, the input is futile. Expanded Gamut will never become commercially viable.
Brad.