Paul, some points to consider:
* How are you proofing, is to an industry target such as GRACoL or Fogra39/ISO Coated? Or to a custom house profile?
* Are you actually separating to and or printing to an industry target such as GRACoL or Fogra39/ISO Coated? Or to a custom house profile?
* Can your press consistently "match" the proof?
* Should the onus be on you or your customer to convert spot colours to CMYK for CMYK only print job? If it is the duty of the customer, then can you provide them with an ICC profile so that they can judge how their CMYK numbers will appear in your printing? If this should be your task, then you should have a mechanism in place to get the client to sign off on that colour and for you to then deliver that colour on press - within "acceptable" tolerance for variation.
Moving on from these general points to your numbered points below. Please forgive me if these points are obvious, one can get down to the nuts and bolts of how to accomplish this later:
1. You will need to ensure that both CS5 and CS6 have access to and can use the same source Pantone library files, and that they have the same colour management settings (source/destination/options) in place to deliver the same final CMYK values (whether or not you decide to use CMYK or LAB based library files). This may be harder to do with customer supplied files, are you doing to change every spot colour in every job to use the "correct" CMYK build?.
2. I would do one or the other, either point 1 (early binding), or point 2 (late binding). If point 1, then conversions happen in InDesign and the .PS or .PDF file delivered to proofing or plating RIP only contains CMYK colours. If point 2, you would need some way to softproof and or hardcopy proof the colour of the RIP conversion.
3. Do you mean a better default Acrobat preflight profile, or a better Acrobat preflight from the GWG or perhaps a vendor such as Enfocus, Callas or somebody else?
4. No comment as of yet
5. This final point would come into play once all of the other issues were solved.
Stephen Marsh
Mark,
I agree that LAB will have to be converted to cmyk, the problem is doing it accurately. We have already needed to do a reprint costing a couple of thousand dollars because of a color mismatch between files from CS5 using cmyk color builds, and CS6 using LAB color builds. I am not interested in reinventing the wheel here, nor am I interested in changing our entire workflow if not needed. The real problem is that I don't know what is needed. That being said, after looking around a bit the last few days, here are the things that I would like to accomplish.
1. Ensure that CS5 and CS6 are producing the SAME color builds when converting colors. Either from LAB to CMYK or RGB to CMYK.
2. If conversions are to happen in the rip, ensure it is using the proper settings for both LAB and RGB.
3. Since I am working on workflow, I would like to explore/implement a better pdf preflight as I don't believe we are using acrobat to its fullest potential.
4. Correct any workflow issues that arise from setting up the above 3 items.
5. Learn a bit more on how I can help my color conscience customers supply files with the proper settings to achieve what they want as I feel I am weak in this area.
Paul