Spot v/s process

pacificiam

Well-known member
Hi
let me knw the basic differences between Spot color , pantone shade and process color????

What theory behind reflection?
 
Get a Pantone + bridge it will be obvious. The theory is that process colours need to be designed to be oposites of RGB, Cyan is to block red light, Magenta blocking Green, Yellow blocking Blue, and K because the idea isn't perfect.
When using pantone there are more colours to use and each bucket of ink is only to reflect a specific colour… less compromise is more bright colour.

That was the non technical explanation :D
 
With process color, there are 4 colors of ink used in varied proportions to produce almost any color. Yellow, magenta, cyan and black are the colors. Red is made with yellow and magenta. Green is cyan and yellow. If there are variations in ink on the press, colors shift. With spot color, one ink is used that is the desired color. Press shifts will make it lighter or darker a little, but the color will be the same hue. But you can't have too many spot colors. Presses only have so many sections, usually 4 to 8. Some colors can't be made with process, like "reflex blue". (The ink colors are not perfect.) To see how this is done in the real world, open boxes and look at the ink patches there. You can see the inks used. Pantone is a company that makes color standards and inks. A designer can specify a Pantone number, chosen from a Pantone book, and that is the color the press will print, using a certified Pantone ink.
 

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