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Not your typical colour guide

Print Solutions


While digital printing is rapidly gaining importance, especially in the packaging industry, one question remains: how can we simulate Pantone colours and custom brand colours with a fixed set of four to seven inks?


GMG ColorServer and OpenColor have colour conversion fully under control. The results are convincing. However, in order to prove this to potential clients, digital printing now has an undeniably compelling argument: GMG ColorBook – it looks like a regular colour guide, but there is more to it.


Peter Schöffler, product manager, explained: ‘In digital printing, GMG ColorBook is a Pantone licensed colour reference for simulating Pantone and custom brand colours based on a precise set of real print conditions. We are not talking about a regular colour guide, but one created on your own press – in real printing conditions. In short: GMG ColorBook shows the actual end result because it is produced under production conditions, on the same press, using the same inks, and on the production substrate.’


With this new solution, the company provides a sales tool for printers who want to physically demonstrate their colour competence in digital printing before an order is placed. In addition, the ColorBook establishes a building block for reliable colour communication. ‘From design to pre-press, from the pressroom to the clients and brands – if everyone’s expectations are aligned, we create reassuring process reliability from start to finish,’ said Peter.


Iain Pike, director of licensing at Pantone, said: ‘Printers and their brand and design clients can quickly and easily compare GMG ColorBook to the Pantone Formula Guide Solid Coated because the page numbers and layout are identical between these references, thereby setting the right colour expectations based on the digital printing job parameters.’


GMG ColorBook comes as an option to ColorServer and OpenColor. ‘It appears as a single additional button in the user interface,’ said Peter. ‘With only a few extra clicks, users can take a big step in quality and consistency for digital print.’



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