HarveyDunn
Active member
For an accurate color chart, what is the best method for "capturing" the colors?
I have a client who wants "the most accurate possible" printed color chart for a line of 89 artists paint colors. They are made with 'traditional" pigments, which means that none of them are blindingly bright. I'm fairly certain they will all be within the GRACOL profile's gamut.
I have real samples of each (paint thickly applied to canvas, low gloss/matte surface, nice and flat application - no ridges or brushstrokes.
I'm wondering what the best technique would be to capture those colors and transmit them to InDesign. The obvious choices seem to be:
*photograph them
*scan them (desktop flatbed?)
*measure them with a spectrophotometer, perhaps multiple times and average the results. Input the LAB values into InDesign and let the Adobe color engine convert it to CMYK
Any thoughts about which of these is best? My gut says it is the last one, but the only spectrophotometer I have access to is an i1 (or is it Eye One). Is that good enough for the job?
I have a client who wants "the most accurate possible" printed color chart for a line of 89 artists paint colors. They are made with 'traditional" pigments, which means that none of them are blindingly bright. I'm fairly certain they will all be within the GRACOL profile's gamut.
I have real samples of each (paint thickly applied to canvas, low gloss/matte surface, nice and flat application - no ridges or brushstrokes.
I'm wondering what the best technique would be to capture those colors and transmit them to InDesign. The obvious choices seem to be:
*photograph them
*scan them (desktop flatbed?)
*measure them with a spectrophotometer, perhaps multiple times and average the results. Input the LAB values into InDesign and let the Adobe color engine convert it to CMYK
Any thoughts about which of these is best? My gut says it is the last one, but the only spectrophotometer I have access to is an i1 (or is it Eye One). Is that good enough for the job?