Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.printery.app/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
What Are Spot Colors?
Spot colors (also called solid colors) are premixed inks printed as separate plates, rather than created by combining CMYK inks.Think of spot colors like paint from a can - the exact color is already mixed, versus CMYK which is like mixing paints to approximate a color.
Spot Colors vs Process Colors (CMYK)
| Aspect | Spot Color | CMYK (Process) |
|---|---|---|
| How created | Premixed ink | Mix of C, M, Y, K |
| Plates needed | 1 per color | 4 plates (C, M, Y, K) |
| Color accuracy | Exact match | Approximate |
| Cost | More expensive | Standard |
| Best for | Logos, brand colors | Photos, full-color |
| Special colors | Metallics, fluorescents | No |
Visual Comparison
Pantone Matching System (PMS)
Pantone is the industry standard for spot colors.Pantone Categories
- Coated (C)
- Uncoated (U)
- Metallics
- Fluorescents
For: Coated paper (glossy/matte finish)Characteristics:
- More vibrant
- Smoother appearance
- Sharper details
When to Use Spot Colors
✅ Use Spot Colors When:
Brand Color Consistency
Brand Color Consistency
Example: Company logo must be exact Pantone color across all materialsWhy: CMYK varies between print runs, Pantone is always consistentCommon users: Corporate brands, franchises
Color Outside CMYK Gamut
Color Outside CMYK Gamut
Example: Bright orange, vibrant green, neon colorsWhy: CMYK can’t reproduce these colors accuratelyResult: Spot color achieves the vibrant look you need
Two-Color Printing
Two-Color Printing
Example: Letterhead with logo in brand color + black textWhy: Cheaper than full CMYK (only 2 plates: Black + Pantone)Benefit: Cost savings while maintaining brand accuracy
Metallic or Fluorescent Effects
Metallic or Fluorescent Effects
Example: Gold foil business cards, fluorescent safety postersWhy: CMYK cannot create metallic shine or fluorescent glowOnly option: Use spot colors
Large Solid Areas
Large Solid Areas
Example: Company brochure with full-page brand color backgroundWhy: Spot color provides more consistent, solid coverageBetter than: CMYK which can show screening patterns
❌ Don’t Use Spot Colors When:
- Photographs and images (use CMYK)
- Gradients with many colors (use CMYK)
- Budget is very limited (spot colors cost more)
- Color consistency isn’t critical
- Printing at home or desktop printer (can’t handle spot colors)
How Spot Colors Work in Printing
Printing Plates
CMYK printing: 4 plates (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black) Spot color printing: 4 plates + 1 per spot color Example:Cost implication: Each additional plate costs money in setup and printing. This is why spot colors are more expensive.
Setting Up Spot Colors in Printery
Note: Spot color support requires Pro subscriptionAdd Spot Color
- Click “Add Spot Color”
- Choose from Pantone library
- Or enter Pantone number (e.g., “185 C”)
Map to Design Color
Assign which RGB color in your design becomes this spot color:
- Select RGB value from your design
- Map it to chosen Pantone
- Plugin will convert this color to spot plate
Set Density (Optional)
Adjust spot color density: 0-100%
- 100% = Full strength (most common)
- 50% = Half strength (tint)
Spot Color Density
Density controls how much ink is applied:| Density | Appearance | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| 100% | Full strength | Logos, solid areas |
| 75% | 3/4 strength | Strong tint |
| 50% | Half strength | Medium tint |
| 25% | Light tint | Subtle effect |
| 10% | Very light | Background wash |
Example
Finding the Right Pantone Color
Method 1: Brand Guidelines
Best option: Check your brand guidelines Look for:- “Pantone 286 C”
- “PMS 185”
- “Pantone Solid Coated 021”
Method 2: Physical Pantone Book
Most accurate: View actual printed swatches- Available at print shops
- Buy your own: ~$100-200
- Shows exact ink on paper
- Essential for color-critical work
Method 3: Online Tools
Convenient but approximate:- Pantone Color Finder (pantone.com)
- Color conversion tools
- Figma plugins
Method 4: Closest CMYK Match
If you must approximate:- Design in RGB/CMYK
- Order a proof print
- Compare to Pantone book
- Find closest match
- Specify that Pantone for future
Common Pantone Colors
Popular Brand Colors
| Brand | Pantone | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Coca-Cola | 485 C | Classic red |
| Tiffany & Co. | 1837 C | Robin egg blue |
| UPS | 462 C | Brown |
| FedEx | Purple C + Orange 021 C | Purple + orange |
| Starbucks | 3425 C | Green |
Commonly Requested Colors
| Pantone | Color | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Black C | Pure black | Text, logos |
| Process Blue C | Bright blue | Technology, corporate |
| Red 032 C | True red | Energy, passion |
| Green C | Grass green | Eco, health |
| Orange 021 C | Vibrant orange | Creativity, energy |
Converting CMYK to Pantone
Can you convert? Sometimes, but not always.When It Works
Some CMYK colors are close to Pantone:- Pure black (K100) ≈ Pantone Black C
- Some reds, blues, greens have close matches
When It Doesn’t Work
Many CMYK colors have no Pantone equivalent:- Subtle color blends
- Tertiary colors
- Most gradients
Conversion Process
Use Conversion Tool
- Pantone.com color tools
- Adobe software (Illustrator, Photoshop)
- Professional color matching
Overprint with Spot Colors
Overprint = Ink prints on top of another color (doesn’t knock out)When to Use Overprint
- Black text over spot color background
- Spot color over CMYK image
- Layering effects
How to Set Overprint
In Printery:- Color tab → Overprint section
- Enable overprint for:
- Fill (solid areas)
- Stroke (lines)
- Choose which colors overprint
Spot Color + CMYK Combination
Common approach: Spot color for logo + CMYK for photosExample: Corporate Brochure
Cost Considerations
Pricing Structure
| Setup | Cost Impact |
|---|---|
| CMYK only | Standard (baseline) |
| CMYK + 1 spot | +15-30% |
| CMYK + 2 spots | +30-50% |
| 2 spot colors only | Often cheaper than CMYK |
When Spot Colors Save Money
Two-color printing (Black + 1 Pantone):- Letterhead
- Business cards
- Simple brochures
- Cheaper than 4-color CMYK
Troubleshooting Spot Colors
Printer says they can't do spot colors
Printer says they can't do spot colors
Causes:
- Digital printer only (not offset)
- Small local shop without capability
- Find offset printer
- Use CMYK approximation
- Consider online specialty printers
Spot color looks different when printed
Spot color looks different when printed
Causes:
- Wrong Pantone (C vs U)
- Paper type mismatch
- Printer mixed ink incorrectly
- Verify correct Pantone specification
- Match paper type to swatch
- Request remake if printer error
Can't map color to spot color in plugin
Can't map color to spot color in plugin
Requires: Pro subscriptionIf you have Pro:
- Verify color exists in design
- Check color isn’t in image (must be vector/fill)
- Contact support if bug
Spot Color Checklist
Before sending spot color files:- Pantone specified correctly: Including C or U designation
- Paper type matches: Coated vs uncoated
- Printer confirms capability: Can handle spot colors
- Density set appropriately: Usually 100% for logos
- Overprint configured: If needed
- Cost approved: Additional plates = higher cost
- Physical swatch verified: Don’t rely on screen
- PDF checked: Spot color plate included
Alternatives to Spot Colors
If spot colors are too expensive or unavailable:Option 1: CMYK Approximation
Use CMYK values that approximate the Pantone:- Close, but not exact
- Varies between print runs
- Much cheaper
Option 2: Digital Color Matching
Some digital printers offer:- Pantone-matched CMYK profiles
- Better than standard CMYK
- No extra plates needed
Option 3: Design Adjustment
Modify design to use colors easily reproduced in CMYK:- Avoid ultra-vibrant colors
- Use CMYK-friendly palette
- Accept slight color variation
Learn More
Color Management
Understanding color systems
Overprint Settings
Master overprint techniques
Color Accuracy
Achieve perfect color matching
Pantone Reference
Common Pantone values
Pro Tip: For brand-critical work, always use physical Pantone swatches. Screens lie, printed swatches don’t!