Re: Aw: Re: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2017-01-06 Thread Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster

On 01/06/2017 01:28 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:

I need a "real" diverse palette of colors.  Currently I have a palette
of about 2000 colors, I put together years ago, but do not have "good"
RGB colors for different brown, copper, silver, and gold, styles of
colors.  The ones I have are not that good.

What you need is palettes with metallic colours and a software that can store 
them as spot colours, because otherwise you won't be able to export any file 
that a digital print shop can use. LibreOffice is the wrong software for this 
purpose. You should also be aware of the fact that metallic and neon colours 
depend on the printing machines available in a print shop. For instance, a shop 
using Roland equipment will only be able to reproduce Roland metallics etc.

You won't find any metallics or neons in the OCSC for the reasons I mentioned.
What I am asking for as "metallic colors" are those that are colors 
closest to the "metals".  Below is a list of metal colors that I know 
of.  I would love to find more, or better looking, HEX code for all the 
"standard" metal colors.  A single color that will make background, 
"highlight", or font color, look gold, silver, copper, bronze, etc.














I am not looking for printing out a sign where there are places that 
actually look like being made of metal.  If I need an "object" in a 
document, I go and use a package that can use scanned in metal images.  
Inkscape or GIMP would be my first package for this. I have done this 
many times, but it is a chore creating all the "metal looking" text, 
background, etc., images and then use them in LO. Having a single color 
that looks close to the various shades of the metals is what I am 
looking for.



Finding good metallic colors
are always - for me - a pain for both LibreOffice and GIMP. I know the
.soc "standard" for LO, but not what GIMP uses.

GIMP, Inkscape, MyPaint etc. are really behind when it comes to palette files, 
because a SOC file doesn't need anything but RGB values (and licensing 
information). However, the other programmes I mentioned are more ambitious than 
LibreOffice, but the GPL format is just plain RGB values. No CMYK colours, no 
spot colours, which is a shame.
Yes, I would love some internal way to choose from a large predefined 
color palette like we have in LO.  Right now, I have to take a screen 
shot of the LO color picking dialog that has the color[s] that I want, 
then use that image withing GIMP to pick the needed color from that 
image.  I have done that many times and never like it.


IF you know of some other .deb package that does this better than GIMP 
or Inkscape, let me know.  I run Ubuntu 16.04LTS most time.  My Windows 
default package is Paint Shop Pro [a version from 2014 or 2015].  For 
some reason GIMP seems not to run properly right now on Windows 10 [Win7 
works though].



If you need metallic colours for printing with a Roland machine, I could create 
a SOC file and send it to you privately, but I doubt that it would be of any 
help. Exporting files for this kind of specialised printer is  simply beyond 
the scope of LibreOffice.


I do not have access to any "professional" printers.  When I need better 
prints or larger formats than 13x19 inches, I go to local print shops.  
They "prefer" PDF file formated documents.  I have never needed to make 
my document into a separate file per color, which are needed for high 
volume offset printing.




Christoph




--
To unsubscribe e-mail to: design+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


Aw: Re: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2017-01-05 Thread Christoph Schäfer

> 
> I need a "real" diverse palette of colors.  Currently I have a palette 
> of about 2000 colors, I put together years ago, but do not have "good" 
> RGB colors for different brown, copper, silver, and gold, styles of 
> colors.  The ones I have are not that good. 

What you need is palettes with metallic colours and a software that can store 
them as spot colours, because otherwise you won't be able to export any file 
that a digital print shop can use. LibreOffice is the wrong software for this 
purpose. You should also be aware of the fact that metallic and neon colours 
depend on the printing machines available in a print shop. For instance, a shop 
using Roland equipment will only be able to reproduce Roland metallics etc.

You won't find any metallics or neons in the OCSC for the reasons I mentioned.


> Finding good metallic colors 
> are always - for me - a pain for both LibreOffice and GIMP. I know the 
> .soc "standard" for LO, but not what GIMP uses.

GIMP, Inkscape, MyPaint etc. are really behind when it comes to palette files, 
because a SOC file doesn't need anything but RGB values (and licensing 
information). However, the other programmes I mentioned are more ambitious than 
LibreOffice, but the GPL format is just plain RGB values. No CMYK colours, no 
spot colours, which is a shame.

If you need metallic colours for printing with a Roland machine, I could create 
a SOC file and send it to you privately, but I doubt that it would be of any 
help. Exporting files for this kind of specialised printer is  simply beyond 
the scope of LibreOffice.

Christoph

-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: design+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


Re: Aw: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2017-01-04 Thread Tim---Kracked_P_P---webmaster


I need a "real" diverse palette of colors.  Currently I have a palette 
of about 2000 colors, I put together years ago, but do not have "good" 
RGB colors for different brown, copper, silver, and gold, styles of 
colors.  The ones I have are not that good. Finding good metallic colors 
are always - for me - a pain for both LibreOffice and GIMP.  I know the 
.soc "standard" for LO, but not what GIMP uses.


Is there any good sources for these needed RGB defined colors?

The "376 palettes available" seems like a lot of palettes to go through 
and decide which one[s] are to be used.  Any way to see the different 
palettes in an image like shown when you choose the color in LO's 
dialogs?  That would be helpful.  I use to have a .html file for a lot 
of RGB color codes and what they look like with various background 
colors.  That helped me decide text and other colors for web pages.  It 
would be nice to be able to look at an image, or sheet, and see what the 
RGB defined color[s] really look like.  Of course, we have to make 
"allowances" for the printers printing them out in a darker shade, 
across all 4 of my [working] inkjet printers.




On 01/02/2017 03:24 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:

Hi Heiko,

I'm not sure if I can handle this. It's probably easy to create an extension 
that just copies 376 colour palettes into a subdirectory, but IMNSHO it would 
make sense to create something more versatile, e.g., an OCSC palette manager 
that enables users to select the installation or de-installation of (in the 
alternative: activation or de-activation) of OCSC colour palettes.

Simply put, having additional 376 palettes available, most of which are special 
purpose ones, doesn't make much sense. Scribus uses a dedicated download 
service to let users choose what they need.

I certainly don't have the time to code this, but if anyone wants to get their 
hands dirty with trying, I'll be supportive.

Best,
Christoph




Gesendet: Dienstag, 27. Dezember 2016 um 11:42 Uhr
Von: "Heiko Tietze" <tietze.he...@googlemail.com>
An: "Christoph Schäfer" <christoph-schae...@gmx.de>, "designglobal.libreoffice.org" 
<design@global.libreoffice.org>, libreoffice <libreoff...@lists.freedesktop.org>
Betreff: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

Hi Christoph,

many thanks for sharing your work. In case of LibreOffice it would be great to 
have these palettes as extensions. Just ask if you need help to pack the soc 
files into oxt. But maintaining it on the extensions site is up to you (or any 
other volunteer).

Cheers,
Heiko

On 12/23/2016 08:01 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:

Open Colour Systems 2.0 Released


freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is pleased to announce the release of Open Colour 
Systems Collection (OCSC) 2.0.

Following the release of OCSC 1.0, freieFarbe / freeColour has been been 
recognised by German authorities as a non-profit organisation. The release of 
OCSC is the first one after the official recognition.

OCSC 2.0 comprises ten additional colour palettes. More importantly, it is now 
also available in Adobe's Swatch Exchange Format (ASE), as well as a Plain Text 
Format version with the file extension CLF.

All colours have been measured from vendor-supplied colour references with a 
spectrophotometer.

Since freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is an advocate of the use of the CIE LAB/HLC 
colour model as a free and reasonable alternative to proprietary colour 
collections, colour values in the palette files are in CIE LAB.

Download


SBZ: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SBZ.zip
SHA1 checksum: 6b2bab7dde9e5fe9e8778ee9f79f31edcaa8cef8

ASE: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ASE.zip
SHA1 checksum: fea350149e2b95af55f36e283fe597f279d3f79c

CLF: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_CLF.zip
SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655


In addition, OCSC 2.0 has been released in three RGB versions for use in 
LibreGraphics programmes that don't support the LAB colour model and/or one of 
the formats listed above (yet). The formats are: GPL (GIMP, Inkscape, Calligra 
Office, Krita, MyPaint), SOC (Apache OpenOffice, LibreOffice, OpenOffice.org), 
and XML (Scribus 1.4.x).

Download


GPL: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_GPL.zip
SHA1 checksum: c0eefb3a74f658c9c201d5671b4af6a085650cbb

SOC: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SOC.zip
SHA1 checksum: 318d8fbaf391b0ec39fa433e807e3ec658381376

XML: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ScrXML.zip
SHA1 checksum: da456792dc89445022ab4ae1af3f5ccedc722cd6


A complete package with all supported formats is available here: 
http://dtpstudio.de/downloads/freeware/OCSC_20.zip
SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655


In additi

Aw: Re: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2017-01-02 Thread Christoph Schäfer
> Gesendet: Montag, 02. Januar 2017 um 11:54 Uhr
> Von: toki <toki.kant...@gmail.com>
> An: design@global.libreoffice.org
> Betreff: Re: Aw: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 
> released
>
> On 01/02/2017 08:24 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:
> 
> > Simply put, having additional 376 palettes available, most of which are 
> > special purpose ones,
> 
> Is there a list of what each of those palettes is for?
> If so, where?
> 
> Failing that, are the names of the palettes meaningful?
> IOW, will a specialized Internet Search Engine be able point a person to
> why the palette was created, and/or what the specific use case of the
> palette is, using just the name of the specific palette?
> 
> > I certainly don't have the time to code this, but if anyone wants to get 
> > their hands dirty with trying, I'll be supportive.
> 
> Once I figured out how to load those palettes into LibO 5.3 beta, my
> first thought was "what is the use case for each of these palettes?"
> 
> I can put transforming the palettes into an extension on my to do list,
> but it probably will be months before they reach the top of that list.
> 
> If I do it, I will put one colour palette in one extension. Whilst this
> is far more work for me, it enables each palette to have an
> understandable explanation on the LibreOffice website. On the flipside,
> having almost 400 extensions just of palettes will have a negative
> impact on users trying to find other extensions.
> Obvious solution is to add a new area "Palettes" next to Events on
> https://extensions.libreoffice.org/ . That specific issue can be
> addressed, when I'm ready to upload the palettes.
> 
> jonathon


Hi Jonathon,


Information regarding the palettes is included in the plain text version of 
OCSC 2.0 (http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_CLF.zip), 
which comprises two plain text files for each palette, one with the colour 
values in LAB (CLF) and another one with a description in German and English 
(TXT).


It might be useful to group the palettes using their purpose (e.g., wall 
paints, foils, car finishings, national standards etc.), i.e., one extension 
per colour type. If you're interested, I can also create SOC files from the 
complete Resene colour collection 
(http://www.resene.co.nz/comn/services/ASE.htm), which was licensed to Scribus 
under a BSD-Style licence, and I'm sure they'll have no problems supporting 
LibreOffice in the same way, especially since it has many more users than 
Scribus. That would be a separate extension: Resene Colours. Note that it'll 
probably be enough to create a single file, which uses only the "Resene Total 
Colour System 2016" palette. This one includes all colours used in the 
specialised palettes.


Creating an extension for every single palette doesn't make much sense, IMHO, 
because users can easily just copy the ones they need into the right directory.


As regards the extensions website, the entry should be called "Colo[u]r 
Palettes", right?


Kind regards,
Christoph

-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: design+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


Aw: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2017-01-02 Thread Christoph Schäfer
Hi Heiko,

I'm not sure if I can handle this. It's probably easy to create an extension 
that just copies 376 colour palettes into a subdirectory, but IMNSHO it would 
make sense to create something more versatile, e.g., an OCSC palette manager 
that enables users to select the installation or de-installation of (in the 
alternative: activation or de-activation) of OCSC colour palettes.

Simply put, having additional 376 palettes available, most of which are special 
purpose ones, doesn't make much sense. Scribus uses a dedicated download 
service to let users choose what they need.

I certainly don't have the time to code this, but if anyone wants to get their 
hands dirty with trying, I'll be supportive.

Best,
Christoph



> Gesendet: Dienstag, 27. Dezember 2016 um 11:42 Uhr
> Von: "Heiko Tietze" <tietze.he...@googlemail.com>
> An: "Christoph Schäfer" <christoph-schae...@gmx.de>, 
> "designglobal.libreoffice.org" <design@global.libreoffice.org>, libreoffice 
> <libreoff...@lists.freedesktop.org>
> Betreff: Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released
>
> Hi Christoph,
> 
> many thanks for sharing your work. In case of LibreOffice it would be great 
> to have these palettes as extensions. Just ask if you need help to pack the 
> soc files into oxt. But maintaining it on the extensions site is up to you 
> (or any other volunteer).
> 
> Cheers,
> Heiko
> 
> On 12/23/2016 08:01 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:
> > Open Colour Systems 2.0 Released
> > 
> > 
> > freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is pleased to announce the release of Open 
> > Colour Systems Collection (OCSC) 2.0.
> > 
> > Following the release of OCSC 1.0, freieFarbe / freeColour has been been 
> > recognised by German authorities as a non-profit organisation. The release 
> > of OCSC is the first one after the official recognition.
> > 
> > OCSC 2.0 comprises ten additional colour palettes. More importantly, it is 
> > now also available in Adobe's Swatch Exchange Format (ASE), as well as a 
> > Plain Text Format version with the file extension CLF.
> > 
> > All colours have been measured from vendor-supplied colour references with 
> > a spectrophotometer.
> > 
> > Since freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is an advocate of the use of the CIE 
> > LAB/HLC colour model as a free and reasonable alternative to proprietary 
> > colour collections, colour values in the palette files are in CIE LAB.
> > 
> > Download
> > 
> > 
> > SBZ: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SBZ.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: 6b2bab7dde9e5fe9e8778ee9f79f31edcaa8cef8
> > 
> > ASE: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ASE.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: fea350149e2b95af55f36e283fe597f279d3f79c
> > 
> > CLF: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_CLF.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655
> > 
> > 
> > In addition, OCSC 2.0 has been released in three RGB versions for use in 
> > LibreGraphics programmes that don't support the LAB colour model and/or one 
> > of the formats listed above (yet). The formats are: GPL (GIMP, Inkscape, 
> > Calligra Office, Krita, MyPaint), SOC (Apache OpenOffice, LibreOffice, 
> > OpenOffice.org), and XML (Scribus 1.4.x).
> > 
> > Download
> > 
> > 
> > GPL: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_GPL.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: c0eefb3a74f658c9c201d5671b4af6a085650cbb
> > 
> > SOC: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SOC.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: 318d8fbaf391b0ec39fa433e807e3ec658381376
> > 
> > XML: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ScrXML.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: da456792dc89445022ab4ae1af3f5ccedc722cd6
> > 
> > 
> > A complete package with all supported formats is available here: 
> > http://dtpstudio.de/downloads/freeware/OCSC_20.zip
> > SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655
> > 
> > 
> > In addition, freieFarbe / freeColour provides other colour-related software 
> > for free here: http://freecolour.org/
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > Colour Software Release Planned
> > ===
> > 
> > freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour also intends to release a previously 
> > closed-source colour software product written in RealBasic as Open Source 
> > under a GPL 2+ licence. fF / fC hopes to find contributors who are 
> > interested in porting the code from RealBasic to C++ and Qt, as well as 
> > mergin

Re: [libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2016-12-27 Thread Heiko Tietze
Hi Christoph,

many thanks for sharing your work. In case of LibreOffice it would be great to 
have these palettes as extensions. Just ask if you need help to pack the soc 
files into oxt. But maintaining it on the extensions site is up to you (or any 
other volunteer).

Cheers,
Heiko

On 12/23/2016 08:01 AM, "Christoph Schäfer" wrote:
> Open Colour Systems 2.0 Released
> 
> 
> freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is pleased to announce the release of Open 
> Colour Systems Collection (OCSC) 2.0.
> 
> Following the release of OCSC 1.0, freieFarbe / freeColour has been been 
> recognised by German authorities as a non-profit organisation. The release of 
> OCSC is the first one after the official recognition.
> 
> OCSC 2.0 comprises ten additional colour palettes. More importantly, it is 
> now also available in Adobe's Swatch Exchange Format (ASE), as well as a 
> Plain Text Format version with the file extension CLF.
> 
> All colours have been measured from vendor-supplied colour references with a 
> spectrophotometer.
> 
> Since freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is an advocate of the use of the CIE 
> LAB/HLC colour model as a free and reasonable alternative to proprietary 
> colour collections, colour values in the palette files are in CIE LAB.
> 
> Download
> 
> 
> SBZ: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SBZ.zip
> SHA1 checksum: 6b2bab7dde9e5fe9e8778ee9f79f31edcaa8cef8
> 
> ASE: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ASE.zip
> SHA1 checksum: fea350149e2b95af55f36e283fe597f279d3f79c
> 
> CLF: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_CLF.zip
> SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655
> 
> 
> In addition, OCSC 2.0 has been released in three RGB versions for use in 
> LibreGraphics programmes that don't support the LAB colour model and/or one 
> of the formats listed above (yet). The formats are: GPL (GIMP, Inkscape, 
> Calligra Office, Krita, MyPaint), SOC (Apache OpenOffice, LibreOffice, 
> OpenOffice.org), and XML (Scribus 1.4.x).
> 
> Download
> 
> 
> GPL: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_GPL.zip
> SHA1 checksum: c0eefb3a74f658c9c201d5671b4af6a085650cbb
> 
> SOC: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SOC.zip
> SHA1 checksum: 318d8fbaf391b0ec39fa433e807e3ec658381376
> 
> XML: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ScrXML.zip
> SHA1 checksum: da456792dc89445022ab4ae1af3f5ccedc722cd6
> 
> 
> A complete package with all supported formats is available here: 
> http://dtpstudio.de/downloads/freeware/OCSC_20.zip
> SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655
> 
> 
> In addition, freieFarbe / freeColour provides other colour-related software 
> for free here: http://freecolour.org/
> 
> 
> 
> Colour Software Release Planned
> ===
> 
> freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour also intends to release a previously 
> closed-source colour software product written in RealBasic as Open Source 
> under a GPL 2+ licence. fF / fC hopes to find contributors who are interested 
> in porting the code from RealBasic to C++ and Qt, as well as merging the 
> features of Swatchbooker and the original product. The majority of the code 
> is UI-related, but the essential algorithms (the core of the product) are 
> well-commented. Any assistance with respect to the organisation of the 
> release of the source code would be welcome.
> 
> 
> 
> About freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour:
> ===
> 
> 
> freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is a non-profit organisation that was founded in 
> 2016 by German and Swiss colour professionals after having worked as an 
> informal initiative without legal status for several years. our motto is "We 
> want to unchain colours". The organisation is looking for cooperation with 
> colour experts, software developers and users around the globe who share our 
> goals. You are invited to become a member and/or contribute your own project.
> 
> freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is convinced that the design world will benefit 
> from truly free colours and better colour software.
> 
> 
> 
> December 2016
> 
> Holger Everding
> Christoph Schäfer
> 
> www.freiefarbe.de
> www.freecolour.org
> 

-- 
Dr. Heiko Tietze
UX Designer
Tel. +49 (0)179/1268509


-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: design+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


[libreoffice-design] Open Colour Systems Collection 2.0 released

2016-12-22 Thread Christoph Schäfer
Open Colour Systems 2.0 Released


freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is pleased to announce the release of Open Colour 
Systems Collection (OCSC) 2.0.

Following the release of OCSC 1.0, freieFarbe / freeColour has been been 
recognised by German authorities as a non-profit organisation. The release of 
OCSC is the first one after the official recognition.

OCSC 2.0 comprises ten additional colour palettes. More importantly, it is now 
also available in Adobe's Swatch Exchange Format (ASE), as well as a Plain Text 
Format version with the file extension CLF.

All colours have been measured from vendor-supplied colour references with a 
spectrophotometer.

Since freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is an advocate of the use of the CIE LAB/HLC 
colour model as a free and reasonable alternative to proprietary colour 
collections, colour values in the palette files are in CIE LAB.

Download


SBZ: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SBZ.zip
SHA1 checksum: 6b2bab7dde9e5fe9e8778ee9f79f31edcaa8cef8

ASE: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ASE.zip
SHA1 checksum: fea350149e2b95af55f36e283fe597f279d3f79c

CLF: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_CLF.zip
SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655


In addition, OCSC 2.0 has been released in three RGB versions for use in 
LibreGraphics programmes that don't support the LAB colour model and/or one of 
the formats listed above (yet). The formats are: GPL (GIMP, Inkscape, Calligra 
Office, Krita, MyPaint), SOC (Apache OpenOffice, LibreOffice, OpenOffice.org), 
and XML (Scribus 1.4.x).

Download


GPL: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_GPL.zip
SHA1 checksum: c0eefb3a74f658c9c201d5671b4af6a085650cbb

SOC: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_SOC.zip
SHA1 checksum: 318d8fbaf391b0ec39fa433e807e3ec658381376

XML: http://freiefarbe.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/OCSC_20_ScrXML.zip
SHA1 checksum: da456792dc89445022ab4ae1af3f5ccedc722cd6


A complete package with all supported formats is available here: 
http://dtpstudio.de/downloads/freeware/OCSC_20.zip
SHA1 checksum: e65fd94db7f0d6484df9ce0cf0288ecd328ec655


In addition, freieFarbe / freeColour provides other colour-related software for 
free here: http://freecolour.org/



Colour Software Release Planned
===

freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour also intends to release a previously closed-source 
colour software product written in RealBasic as Open Source under a GPL 2+ 
licence. fF / fC hopes to find contributors who are interested in porting the 
code from RealBasic to C++ and Qt, as well as merging the features of 
Swatchbooker and the original product. The majority of the code is UI-related, 
but the essential algorithms (the core of the product) are well-commented. Any 
assistance with respect to the organisation of the release of the source code 
would be welcome.



About freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour:
===


freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is a non-profit organisation that was founded in 
2016 by German and Swiss colour professionals after having worked as an 
informal initiative without legal status for several years. our motto is "We 
want to unchain colours". The organisation is looking for cooperation with 
colour experts, software developers and users around the globe who share our 
goals. You are invited to become a member and/or contribute your own project.

freieFarbe e.V. / freeColour is convinced that the design world will benefit 
from truly free colours and better colour software.



December 2016

Holger Everding
Christoph Schäfer

www.freiefarbe.de
www.freecolour.org

-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: design+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted