Hello!
I'm trying to create a letterhead in Illustrator (logo at the top of an 8.5x11, with an address, etc, on the bottom), but don't know Illustrator all that well. So, I built the logo in Photoshop using its Pantone library, saved the logo as a TIF, and imported that into Illustrator. Now I have to make sure the PANTONE colors from Photoshop are matching in Illustrator so that the printers get only a total of two Pantone colors in the AI file..
One difference I noticed between the PANTONE names in Photoshop vs Illustrator: PANTONE 7463 in Photoshop has a "C" at the end, while PANTONE 7463 in Illustrator has a "U" (which I had to find in the PANTONE Uncoated Library, vs the Coated and Process Libraries - it doesn't exist in those). I think this makes a difference.. does it? AND, if it does, how do I make sure I'm getting the same PANTONE from Photoshop into Illustrator?
I really need some help on this one. Thanks!
I'm trying to create a letterhead in Illustrator (logo at the top of an 8.5x11, with an address, etc, on the bottom), but don't know Illustrator all that well. So, I built the logo in Photoshop using its Pantone library, saved the logo as a TIF, and imported that into Illustrator. Now I have to make sure the PANTONE colors from Photoshop are matching in Illustrator so that the printers get only a total of two Pantone colors in the AI file..
One difference I noticed between the PANTONE names in Photoshop vs Illustrator: PANTONE 7463 in Photoshop has a "C" at the end, while PANTONE 7463 in Illustrator has a "U" (which I had to find in the PANTONE Uncoated Library, vs the Coated and Process Libraries - it doesn't exist in those). I think this makes a difference.. does it? AND, if it does, how do I make sure I'm getting the same PANTONE from Photoshop into Illustrator?
I really need some help on this one. Thanks!
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- theAntic