The principle of color matching and color perception

As a printing practitioner, we all know that color is the most sensitive and the most difficult to control. Accurately mixing and matching colors is the most daunting challenge before us. For this reason, you may have been rejected by customers more than once. Product experience. When matching colors, related technical issues to be considered include color description, digital display, color synthesis system, toner (pigment), printing technology, measurement, observation conditions, and the surface of the substrate, etc., in which each factor changes. Both have a great influence on the ability to match colors. It is almost impossible to fully consider each of the above-mentioned factors, but in the production of production should take care of some major aspects, and their relationship with each other.

Figure 1: Using color measurement equipment, color accuracy can be evaluated based on data. Such as a densitometer or spectrophotometer

Color description

The core of color management is the way color is described. The most common and popular method at the moment is Pantone's Pantone Matching System. The system has the ability to provide color descriptions and descriptions to designers and users, and printers use various methods to copy the illustrated colors as accurately as possible. The process of copying is related to whether the selected ink system is in compliance with Pantone's standards. On the surface, this process is simple and perfect, but there are actually many potential problems with screen printing.

Many printers are familiar with 1012 Pantone color guides: Pantone Color Selection Manual. It includes all colors that can be printed on coated paper or uncoated paper, as well as optional Pantone blending formulas.

For screen printers, the problem of color matching was faced from the very beginning: Almost all chromatograms were produced using offset printing, and their ink formulations were designed for offset printing inks. In fact, the Pantone colors matched by the screen printing process can only be called "Pantone analog color".

When trying to use the Pantone Color Reference Manual, screen printers must keep in mind a few limitations. First of all, we must look at the time of publication of the reference manual. For manuals that have been published for a long time, oxidation may occur on the surface. It is recommended not to use manuals that were published a year ago. In recent years, Pantone began to use the date on the manual as a reference. Due to the relatively high prices of these manuals, giving up them is always repulsive, but their color is very different from the new version. Continued use will cause a serious decline in product quality. Therefore, when making a decision, it must be Weighing again and again. This applies to both the designer and the production department, and the version used by the printer should be the same as the version suggested by the customer. This is the only way to ensure an exact match of color.

Another major challenge facing screen printers is the fact that the range of printing materials is too wide, and these materials have a great influence on the appearance of printed colors. For example, if printing on textiles, use coated Pantone chromatography as a reference? Still using the uncoated Pantone chromatography as a reference, it is difficult to make a choice, requiring the printer to have considerable experience. If printing with UV inks, glossiness issues need to be considered because the gloss of UV inks is much higher than that of coated materials. In either case, the customer is the key figure in the final judgment of whether the color is accurately matched. If you use the ink mixing values ​​indicated in the Pantone chromatograph for production, you should also be aware that many of the factors for color reproduction go beyond what Pantone chromatography can control.

In addition, when the operator controls the color, it is largely related to other factors that will be described below.

Digital Display

Since we have now entered the world of digital printing, all image manuscripts are stored as electronic files in vector format or raster format. On the monitor we can see the color of the image. The appearance of the color depends on what the human eye sees. But no two monitors or observation conditions are exactly the same, so when looking at the color, it needs to be done under the control of a color management system.

Digital color management achieves exactly the same color by characterizing and correcting each display. As a printer, our job is to look at the documents and make sure that the observation conditions are as close as possible to these parameter descriptions, and to confirm the colors specified by the customer.

Although we will not discuss the ICC color management profile here, the various components that make up the ICC monitor profile have a great influence on the color appearance we observe. The following points need to be considered in monitor observation factors:

· Color temperature when observed (5000°K or 6500°K);

· Work color space (sRGB, Adobe 1998, Apple, Color Match, etc.)

· Display gamma

· White and black spots

· Display contrast

The above factors vary from monitor to monitor, resulting in changes in the RGB values ​​that make the appearance of the same Pantone reference color very different; similarly, the L*a*b* values ​​of the same color will also be different. In addition, there is a big difference between the light emitted by the display and the brightness reflected on the printed surface, which further exacerbates the inability of the colors to achieve a perfect match. In the case of hard color matching in this case, the color code provided by the customer is also the only basis.

With the continuous improvement of the design and color management technology, the display parameters and characteristic description files have become correspondingly more complete. Most color management systems allow feature descriptor files to be embedded in graphic image files. Of course, in order to ensure that the characteristics of the document can have a certain degree of accuracy, require each person operating the computer should have knowledge of digital color management. (to be continued)

The Storage Gift Box is also usually called a finishing Gift Box, a storage box, a finishing box, a storage box, a storage box. There are various materials for storing gift boxes, usually plastic, cloth, paper, metal, wood and so on.


Storage gift box include transportation, refrigeration, home, finishing, transportation, refrigeration, hardware, supermarkets, storage (vegetables, fruits), home, turnover, finishing (documents, clothing, toys) and so on.


Storage gift box usually has a lid seal, pulleys move effortless, oil resistant, non-toxic, odorless, easy to clean, neatly stacked, easy to manage, bearing strength, can be nested, save space, light weight and so on!

Storage Gift Box

Storage Gift Box

Storage Gift Box,Stationery Storage Gift Box,Storage Gift Paper Box,Foldable Storage Gift Box

Shenzhen Yanhua Packing Products Co., Ltd. , http://www.yhpackagingbox.com