I'm looking for input from the forum on how others communicate with the press room on color matching.
Proof to press match guidelines for them ?
Press guys will say close enough...
What's close enough ?
Should they measure Delta E between the proof and press in areas that do not match ?
Their standard press colorbar data would be saved by the press color scanner.
OK, for commercial presswork...
Preamble....
It helps to not think of a printing press as making color but rather what it is basically designed to do: lay down an even film (about 1.5 microns thick) of ink onto a substrate in the presence of a film of solvent (fountain solution). That process is in flux and is affected by the image contents/ink usage, paper,, temperature, speed, etc.
The press operator's mind is primarily focussed on accomplishing that task rather than "matching" a proof. Delta E talk will likely not be understood.
"Matching" the proof...
Printing is an analog process rather than digital. It's not binary. So there are degrees of "match" ("close enough") once the press reaches it's nominal condition for the job. By their design, offset are stable - but not consistent while running a job. All that implies a tolerance for "match."
OK...
To your specific question.
IMHO, ISO 12657/GRACoL 7 primarily relate to setting up a press to align to an industry specified print characteristic that is embodied by a proof that represents that print characteristic. The targets and tolerances specified are not necessarily reflective of real production printing. So, industry specified tolerances may end up too narrow or too wide for any given production job.
The color bar on a live job may not reflect the appearance of the live image area ("we sell the job's appearance not the colorbars"). They can be useful as base targets for reprints though.
There is also no industry specified tolerance for the live image area. System Brunner tried to create such a system (the Star rating system) back in the 70s - but I don't think that it ever really caught on.
So, what usually happens is that the press operator "comes up to color" during make ready and ends up with presswork that, in his opinion and given the time and materials constraints he's operating under, aligns enough to the proof in terms of overall visual appearance that most buyers (or their representatives) will accept it, pay for it, and not demand a reprint.
For jobs that are more critical in terms of press to proof alignment, the information about what elements of the imagery needs the closest match and which elements of the imagery that can be sacrificed in order to make the match are communicated by the sales rep to the pressroom or by the print buyer directly. Then, during makeready, the press operator comes up to color then tears/cuts a press sheet through the critical color area and lays it over that area on the proof. If he cannot visually distinguish between the the press sheet and the proof at the crossover then he's made the match and runs the job. Generally, for this type of work the print buyer and/or their representative will be available press side or in a customer recovery room to confirm agreement (or disagreement) with the press operator's judgement.
This is all done visually rather than by instrument because while instruments may provide a numeric indication of a match the numbers may not correctly indicate the actual appearance of the match.
Some related reading on the topic:
Who is responsible for print shop color?:
The Print Guide: Who is responsible for print shop color?
What the press operator is scrutinizing:
The Print Guide: What the press operator is scrutinizing
The Color Bar:
The Print Guide: The Color Bar