Well... according to you, pretty much none of the palettes provided with Scribus are of any practical use... I wonder why they are there... CMYK numbers aren't any closer to actual color if they aren't refered to a color profile...
Talking about the Pantone ones, the X-Ref tool < http://www.pantone.com/pages/pantone/color_xref.aspx> provides data in L*a*b* , sRGB and (when applicable) CMYK, i.e. the same values as in Adobe's palettes. So the only limitation is in Scribus which is unable to deal with L*a*b* colors. By the way, for the people using color management in Scribus, you could configure SwatchBooker to use the same color profiles, and import these same data ("Open from web") which would then be converted to the right RGB values for your screen... Of course, there will still be some discrepancies with the actual colors but I guess I don't need to teach you why ;-) Olivier ---------- Message transf?r? ---------- > From: "\"Christoph Sch?fer\"" <christoph-schaefer at gmx.de> > To: "Scribus User Mailing List" <scribus at lists.scribus.net> > Cc: > Date: Tue, 24 Sep 2013 07:18:33 +0200 (CEST) > Subject: [scribus] Some clarifications regarding Pantone [was: making your > own Pantone color list] > Hi all, > > > It should be clear by now that a simple colour number like "PMS 100" isn't > really helpful to anyone, and, unfortunately, another issue makes it even > worse, which is why I mentioned the subdirectory "Legacy". The files in > "Legacy" use the legacy colour model (CMYK), whereas the newer ones in > "Swatch Libraries" use CIE L*a*b*! Thus, using hand-made "Pantone" RGB > palettes is pretty pointless -- it might make people feel better, but it's > without any relevance with respect to colour correctness at the print shop. > This is also the reason why Olivier's "Pantone" script doesn't help with > print jobs. All it does is downloading colours from an online repo for > smartphone and tablet apps (!), and these colours are in RGB (i.e., more or > less a gimmick). In other words, those "unofficial" swatches are without > practical use, and an RGB colour with a name like "PMS 100" is as useful as > an RGB colour called "My favourite blue" or "Tracy" -- it doesn't make a > difference. > -------------- section suivante -------------- Une pi?ce jointe HTML a ?t? nettoy?e... URL: <http://lists.scribus.net/pipermail/scribus/attachments/20130925/21338cc6/attachment.html>
