Re: Pantone 2.0 and ISO print standards
Henk,
If 40% of PMS colors can be reproduced in Goe colors (I would have thought that it would be much higher than that), and only about the same amount of PMS colors can be reproduced in print, does this tell us at all how many Goe colors can be reproduced in CMYK?
I can see a problem with the sRGB being smaller and causing mismatches. That's why I would much rather have Lab values to start with. But if going to web, sRGB is what is used there as the standard, so there's no much that can be done there unless the standard changes.
"If one transforms the CIE-Lab values into CMYK process colors profiles have to catch all the colors inside the CMYK Process gamut. As absolute as possible. For the colors ouside the CMYK Process gamut a perceptual rendering can be used. However one gambles because these colors cannot produced (lack of gamut) so any solution seems to be wrong."
Surely not going to be automated then, unless the programs somehow are set up to handle that. This would mean the in-gamut colors could be mapped using Relative Colorimetric Intent (not sure if pastels - colors with 20% or less of one or more process colors - would look right here though, but probably better than using Absolute Colorimetric), and then out-of-gamut colors using Perceptual. That's not even possible without workarounds now (read: very manual if having to be done this way).
"By creating special profiles one can try to reduce the differences in Hue and accept differences in Chroma and L."
This is what I'm after. More info on making profiles with Delta H in mind, or different method of conversion to yield better Delta H? When having to accept Chroma and L, it still looks the best as far as color match, correct? Maybe a little darker or lighter, maybe brighter or duller (not as saturated depending on paper), but the hue (color) looks closer than when doing conversion like we do now? (e.g. now we would use Adobe default Relative Colorimetric Intent, Black Point Compensation, with use of standards-based profile like GRACoL2006_Coated1v2, ISOcoatedv2, or ISOuncoated (although I wouldn't use that profile for conversion, just the FOGRA29 data to build the profile for conversion, and use source Lab values, which would be converted to CMYK upon output, using color management to get the CMYK values)
"It would be great if a profile generating program could calculate how the maximum CMYK Process gamut relates to the actual Goe color (CIE-lab values)." Yeah, if we could automatically get the closest match no matter what paper, then that would be great. Unfortunately, it's either going to have to be done by the vendors (Adobe) to be able to use different rendering intents on the fly depending on where the color in the gamut is at, or be done in the making of the profile to get the best mapping of out-of-gamut colors into the destination (coated or uncoated, etc.) colorspace.
"In spite of several promises I stil did not get the proper working myPantone software. As soon as I have this one, more info will be made available."
Well, since you're the only one really discussing this that I've heard of, please do let us know of your progress in figuring this out.
Thank you,
Don