ASchuett
Member
Hello everyone,
let me explain my problem: Today I had a discussion with my colleague about the appearance of a specific orange tone. This tone had been printed on an offset machine in the past. Today I had to produce some flyers in exactly the same orange tone on a Xerox machine. It took me a lot of effort but in the end the orange printed on Xerox looked exactly like the orange printed in offset when viewed under D50 norm light.
Now we come to the point of our discussion: The flyers were brought to an office room with some kind of energy efficient light bulbs. In the office room, there is clearly some metamerism showing. It makes exactly this orange under these specific light bulbs on exactly that kind of paper that we used (lots of fluorescent whitener) look different. The effect can only be seen on the samples, printed on Xerox, not on the offset prints.
My point of view is: This is exactly why we use standardized D50 norm light to view color samples. We should just ignore the metamerism as it will appear only in this single office room, and nowhere else. It`s just a bad luck combination of circumstances. The offset prints might as well show metamerism if you took any other kind of nasty light source. Maybe, to satisfy our client, we should try a different kind of paper for this job and the problem will be solved.
My colleagues point of view is: It's the Xerox machines fault. We should have bought a laser printer from another vendor.
let me explain my problem: Today I had a discussion with my colleague about the appearance of a specific orange tone. This tone had been printed on an offset machine in the past. Today I had to produce some flyers in exactly the same orange tone on a Xerox machine. It took me a lot of effort but in the end the orange printed on Xerox looked exactly like the orange printed in offset when viewed under D50 norm light.
Now we come to the point of our discussion: The flyers were brought to an office room with some kind of energy efficient light bulbs. In the office room, there is clearly some metamerism showing. It makes exactly this orange under these specific light bulbs on exactly that kind of paper that we used (lots of fluorescent whitener) look different. The effect can only be seen on the samples, printed on Xerox, not on the offset prints.
My point of view is: This is exactly why we use standardized D50 norm light to view color samples. We should just ignore the metamerism as it will appear only in this single office room, and nowhere else. It`s just a bad luck combination of circumstances. The offset prints might as well show metamerism if you took any other kind of nasty light source. Maybe, to satisfy our client, we should try a different kind of paper for this job and the problem will be solved.
My colleagues point of view is: It's the Xerox machines fault. We should have bought a laser printer from another vendor.