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Reddit mentions of Pantone Plus Series CMYK Guide Set GP5101

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Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Pantone Plus Series CMYK Guide Set GP5101. Here are the top ones.

Pantone Plus Series CMYK Guide Set GP5101
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2,868 process colorsChromatically arrangedScreen tint percentages are providedTwo-guide set on coated and uncoated stockAccurately select, specify and communicate color for four-color process printing
Specs:
ColorPlus Series CMYK Guide Set GP5101
Height2 Inches
Length10.5 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.9479877266 Pounds
Width3.75 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Pantone Plus Series CMYK Guide Set GP5101:

u/oneDegreeMediaGroup ยท 3 pointsr/AdobeIllustrator

>on screen

That's your biggest mistake.

NEVER trust what you see on screen. Even a perfectly calibrated monitor isn't going to look the same as the printed material, because ambient lighting makes such a huge difference - That's why Pantone books even include a "lighting test" swatch in the back of the book that indicates if you're viewing the book under the correct light, as different Pantone inks respond differently to different wavelengths/color temperatures of light.

Go buy your Pantone Formula Coated/Uncoated swatch books. They cost about $135, which I'm willing to bet is less than what it's going to cost you to re-order your client's work. (My first color mistake cost me $270 - i bought my Pantone books the same day.) Then keep it in a dark box, away from light, unless you're using it.

You might also consider getting the CMYK Guide, which has combinations of CMYK (no Pantone inks, just standard CMYK) so you can pick your "normal" CMYK/Process colors from it, rather than from your monitor.

And as stated elsewhere, if you're not actually printing using Pantone inks (called "Spot Colors", used most often for 1-color or 2-color jobs), then don't use a Pantone color to choose from - many Pantone colors CAN'T be represented using CMYK. There's a book for that, as well, called the Color Bridge book - it shows the "closest approximation" to a Pantone color using CMYK inks, but you should only ever be in that territory with a client who has specified Pantone colors for their identity, and is OK with Bridge matching).

Bottom line, don't use Pantone if you don't have to. Never trust your monitor. Always refer to the printed swatch books. And always get a printed proof if there's any doubt (which you did, so good on you there!)

As far as printing vector art (non-solid color) with a Pantone Spot color, you absolutely can, but your AI document has to be set up correctly. Your artwork all needs to be recolored (using the Edit...Edit Colors...Recolor) to use only that spot color - AI will tint the color correctly on that artwork. But again, this only applies if you're actually printing with Spot Colors, not if you're printing 4-color/CMYK/Process (all terms for the same thing).



-[odmg]