In the printing industry, the term colour spectrum usually refers to an achievable colour space.
The ‘colour spectrum’ describes the totality of colours that a printing process or a specific printer can reproduce. The colour spectrum is determined by the printing inks, inks and printing techniques used. ‘The new CANON printer has a super colour spectrum’ would be a classic colloquial formulation.
The larger the colour space of a printing process, the more different colours can be reproduced accurately. Printing technologies such as offset printing, flexographic printing and digital printing have different colour spectrums that depend on the printing ink, substrate and other technical factors such as process colours or spot colours.
Colour gamut control is an important aspect of the printing industry, especially when it comes to reproducing accurate and consistent colours in printed materials. Colour management systems are used to ensure that the colours on the printed product match the intended colour values, digital proofs are used to check on the machine and in advance of the design process to ensure colour accuracy in the final print.
However, a colour spectrum can also be a single spectrum of a single colour.
If a colour is measured with a spectral measuring device, a file is created in which, for example, an emission colour spectrum is written to a file when measuring monitors or a reflectance colour spectrum is written to a file when measuring prints. Typical files such as CXF (Colour Exchange Format) or CGATS contain a colour spectrum or several colour spectra that are spectrally represented in the file. A value is stored for each wavelength measuring point of the measuring device, from which a colour value can then be calculated.
An example of such a CGATS file can be found in our paper white tables for printing papers, where we have measured the colour spectrum of the paper and published it as a file. Such a CGATS file looks like this:
CGATS.17
ORIGINATOR "Proof GmbH, https://www.proof.de | BabelColor CT&A, version 4.0.0 b298"
LGOROWLENGTH 1
CREATED "2019-02-28" # Time: 16:51:26
INSTRUMENTATION "i1Pro 2 (XRGA)"
# Instrument Serial Number: "1095898"
#
# Sample-1 (S1) name: "Arktika-GC1-M2"
#
MEASUREMENT_SOURCE ""S1: Reflectance (M2) Illuminant:D50 Observer:2_deg Units=Reflectance(0-1) WhiteBase=Automatic Filter=no""
#
KEYWORD "SAMPLE_ID"
KEYWORD "SAMPLE_NAME"
NUMBER_OF_FIELDS 44
BEGIN_DATA_FORMAT
SAMPLE_ID SAMPLE_NAME L*a*b*_L L*a*b*_a L*a*b*_b L*C*h*(ab)_L L*C*h*(ab)_C L*C*h*(ab)_h nm380 nm390 nm400 nm410 nm420 nm430 nm440 nm450 nm460 nm470 nm480 nm490 nm500 nm510 nm520 nm530 nm540 nm550 nm560 nm570 nm580 nm590 nm600 nm610 nm620 nm630 nm640 nm650 nm660 nm670 nm680 nm690 nm700 nm710 nm720 nm730
END_DATA_FORMAT
NUMBER_OF_SETS 1
BEGIN_DATA
1 Arktika-GC1-M2 95,45 0,6834 3,022 95,45 3,098 77,26 0,4987 0,5423 0,5984 0,7088 0,7831 0,8209 0,8362 0,8462 0,8558 0,8625 0,8682 0,8732 0,8764 0,8783 0,8805 0,8803 0,8811 0,8822 0,8806 0,8840 0,8856 0,8896 0,8943 0,8997 0,9078 0,9182 0,9316 0,9424 0,9501 0,9546 0,9563 0,9571 0,9612 0,9646 0,9671 0,9711
END_DATA
In the ‘Sample_ID’ line, the measured spectra are listed in columns from 380-730 nanometres after the LAB and LCH values; the respective measured values from which the LAB and LCH colour values were calculated are then listed in the line under ‘BEGIN_DATA’.
The term colour spectrum would therefore refer here to the actual individual colour spectrum of a measured colour, and not to the colour space of a printer or printing process.
A few days ago Proof GmbH was the first company to be certified for proofing for the new 7C exchange colour space FOGRA55. Fogra has developed characterisation data for extended multicolour printing with the printing colours CMYKOGV – i.e. cyan, magenta, yellow, black (contrast), orange, green and violet – FOGRA55 as part of a research project over the past few years. The characterisation data and the ICC profile Ref-ECG-CMYKOGV_FOGRA55_TAC300.icc have been published on the Fogra website in recent weeks. We have now carried out the certification via GMG ColorProof, as … read more
In 2021 proof.de was again Fogra certified including Fogra “Spot cert” certification, i.e. for the display of spot colours such as PANTONE C and U.
Several errors have crept into the new PANTONE 2023 fan decks. In both the PANTONE Solid Coated and the Solid Uncoated color fans, there are colours for which the new ink formulations are incorrect. In the PANTONE Formula Guide Solid Coated fan 2023, PANTONE 107 C and PANTONE 108 C have absolutely identical ink recipes, as well as PANTONE 113 C and PANTONE 114 C. As the colors differ, this cannot be the correct. Several errors in the PANTONE Solid Uncoated fan 2023 In the PANTONE Solid Uncoated fan 2023 … read more
Over the last few months, we at Proof.de have been thinking about further improving our already very good colour measurement technology in terms of speed and measurement precision. Relatively quickly it became clear that only two devices would come into question: The KonicaMinolta MYIRO-9, the successor of the former FD-9, or the X-Rite ISIS 2 XL. The starting point: Since we at Proof GmbH have 5 proofing devices, the calibration of targets for profile optimisation is a time-critical undertaking for us. Therefore, we had been looking around for an upgrade of … read more
After Eddy Hagen pointed out in this posts, that there were some major colour deviations between the brand new PANTONE Solid Coated Guide 2023 and the previous version especially for the PANTONE 2635 C, I was curious to lookup the same colours in the new PANTONE Color Bridge Coated Guide of 2023 and compare the colours with the previous version. I measured a dE00 of 8,15 between the two colours that Eddy mentioned, which is really far apart from how accurate PANTONE colours should match between the different PANTONE guides. … read more
In the current issue of Fogra News “Fogra Aktuell” Proof GmbH is involved in two places. Firstly, a summary of the Fogra report on our first FOGRA55 certification for seven-colour printing with extended colour space in CMYKOGV appeared. You can also find more information on our FOGRA55 certification on the Fogra website: https://fogra.org/en/press-releases/fogracert-erste-cpc-zertifizierung-fuer-fogra55-cmykogv-330 and on proofing.de: And secondly, there was a report on the completion of the research project for textile digital printing, FOGRA58, in which we were allowed to investigate and test the proof capability of the new textile … read more
This year we once again created proofs for Fogra certification and sent them to Munich-Aschheim for testing. With these proof prints, which we print according to three different proof standards and on three different papers, we point out that we not only deliver excellent proof quality through internal quality controls and checks, but that the quality of our proofs is also measured and confirmed by external experts. We have now had test prints certified by Fogra for the 12th time. We have also been “Spot-cert” certified for the display of … read more
Whether it’s a large global corporation or a small company, the following often applies to designs or redesigns today: we develop everything for digital first.
Even almost 9 years after the introduction of the successor colour space PSOCoatedV3, ISOCoatedV2 / FOGRA39 is still the most widespread colour space in Europe. We at Proof GmbH count around 200 jobs from time to time for the German Printing and Media Industries Federation, among others. In the last count, proofs in ISOCoatedV2 accounted for around 68% of all proof jobs at our company. This is a clear sign of the continued widespread use of the colour space. ISOCoatedV2: From the classic colour space to the beacon of the … read more
Peter Jäger is an expert in colour management that reliably works across the boundaries of printers and monitors, web and print – essentially: cross-media.