This has always confused me...
We often use PMS 272--a shade of purple. When I set up this color in Quark 4.11, I go to Edit > Colors > New, then choose Pantone Coated (for a coated print job). I type "272" in the Pantone field. It pulls up 272, which on my Mac looks blue, not purple. If I then switch the Model from Pantone Coated to CMYK, it becomes the purple shade it's supposed to be. But why should I have to do this? Shouldn't the Pantone Coated color match more closely than a CMYK color? It makes no sense to me. I have to work in CMYK in order to see how things will look, then switch it back to Pantone Coated before outputting in order not to screw up the printer. Is this right? Any thoughts from more experienced and wiser designers would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Andy
We often use PMS 272--a shade of purple. When I set up this color in Quark 4.11, I go to Edit > Colors > New, then choose Pantone Coated (for a coated print job). I type "272" in the Pantone field. It pulls up 272, which on my Mac looks blue, not purple. If I then switch the Model from Pantone Coated to CMYK, it becomes the purple shade it's supposed to be. But why should I have to do this? Shouldn't the Pantone Coated color match more closely than a CMYK color? It makes no sense to me. I have to work in CMYK in order to see how things will look, then switch it back to Pantone Coated before outputting in order not to screw up the printer. Is this right? Any thoughts from more experienced and wiser designers would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Andy