chevalier
Well-known member
Perhaps I am very late to the dance but I recently received files with two Pantone colors overprinting. The proofs generated a result that looked pretty nice but in reality the opacities of the inks on press created a wildly different result. We very strongly push customers not to use these techniques because of software and proofers near total inability to simulate opacity (are you listening vendors?!). The customer didn't like the print job and after a very verbose discussion took our advice to let us convert to CMYK and see what we could come up with as a match to the inkjet proof they wanted to match. This is a fairly common occurrence in packaging preflight as everyone is obsessed with the overuse of spot colors.
We opened the files and couldn't figure out how in the world these dual color objects were created. Usually you'll find two objects with the one on top set to overprint, or multiply via transparency. We were stumped for a while then I noticed on the appearance panel that dual fills were utilized. My team has 50+ years of combined digital prepress work and none of us had every seen or known multiple fills were possible via the appearance panel. You can even mix multiple gradient fills, etc. which is a possible recipe for a real nightmare. I figured this was worth sharing. Adobe Illustrator CC2014 PDF is attached for reference.
We opened the files and couldn't figure out how in the world these dual color objects were created. Usually you'll find two objects with the one on top set to overprint, or multiply via transparency. We were stumped for a while then I noticed on the appearance panel that dual fills were utilized. My team has 50+ years of combined digital prepress work and none of us had every seen or known multiple fills were possible via the appearance panel. You can even mix multiple gradient fills, etc. which is a possible recipe for a real nightmare. I figured this was worth sharing. Adobe Illustrator CC2014 PDF is attached for reference.