![]() The management of colour is a huge, and often times complex, business to get your head around. There are a myriad of colour systems such as: Pantone, CMYK, RGB, HEX as well as trying to work out which system you need for each project. Gav Cooper asked me about colours and how one should approach it given the various options open to us when designing a logo. Pantone Color Bridge Cheat Sheet documents: Pantone Plus Color Bridge CMYK & Pantone Color Bridge Plus Coated Bonus feature: you get the RGB and HTML conversion values along with CMYK.īuying yourself one of these Pantone books is a solid tip from me… No one likes guess work with something as crucial as colour for a brand identity. They are incredibly valuable when it comes to finding and specifying colours for a logo design. There is nothing like having the actual printed Pantone Bridge swatch book to hand. It is still useful as a casual reference guide in searching for CMYK value breakdowns of a Pantone colour. There are limitations with an onscreen version of these cheat sheets, namely you can’t see how a specific Pantone colour actually looks printed. ![]() ![]() I have previously written about the Pantone Color Bridge Swatch Books and how important these Pantone book are for any designer. Note: In order to partially view these Scribd documents you do need to sign-up, and at least trial Scribd for a month in order to access the full documents. These Pantone Color Bridge documents: Pantone Plus Color Bridge CMYK & Pantone Color Bridge Plus Coated on Scribd are really very useful as an online resource for Pantone to CMYK colour conversions. Pantone Color Bridge Plus and CMYK Cheat Sheets ![]()
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