On Nov 20, 2011, at 6:56 PM, Zdenek Wagner wrote:

> This information is a bit misleading. As I wrote, Pantone are custom
> colours that cannot be printed with CMYK, they can only be
> approximated. Such swatches are useful if you have to approximate a
> Pantone colour with CMYK. It sometimes happens.

No, Pantone is a company which sells color systems and inks.

They have a line of spot colors (identified by numbers and/or names) _some_ of 
which are outside of the CMYK gamut (but many are w/in Hexachrome gamut).

They also market materials which identify which CMYK builds can be used to 
approximate which Pantone Spot Colors --- note that most printers mix their 
spot colour inks according to Pantone's formula guides and the colour accuracy 
will depend not only on how the press is operated and the ink interacts w/ the 
paper.

If one needs to do Spot Colors in XeTeX, that's a bit of a problem, since 
making a named ink / plate isn't easily done in XeTeX (this can be done in 
pdftex using ConTeXt, or if need be w/ raw PostScript and presumably PostScript 
specials) --- but that's not the CMYK printing from the Subject line.

William

-- 
William Adams
senior graphic designer
Fry Communications
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.




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