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Because Pantone's colors don't come out of your press ready to ink. A set of Pantone colors, after the ink is applied, is a sunk cost. Just like having a color proof, a Pantone color set requires a $40,000 investment in ink to make it worthwhile.
I have used these exact words in many different conversations with Pantone. I'm amazed that the Pantone rep has never been able to convince a client to use these colors in print. I'm also frustrated that the rep hasn't been able to figure out why they're not working. It's not like Pantone hasn't spent the last 25 years developing technology to produce these colors.
Even if you're using Pantone logo colors to make your print really pop, which you should be doing, you're still going to have to ink the press. You're still going to have to make sure your press ink is rich enough to make the colors pop. You're still going to have to make sure your press runs are clean. You're still going to have to make sure your press is maintained with the right ink and its ready to run when you need it.
I'm having the same problem as the person who responded to your question. I'm using Pantone colors in my Ink Manager to match colors used by the corporate graphic artist. I've tried changing the CMYK to Pantone colors and vice versa, but I'm having the same problem.
So, the question is, does anyone know why I'm printing the dark logo pantone and the normal pantone as cmyk? The print company says that's because the regular pantone is not pure white. Is that true? If so, how do I change this?
The Pantone website has color swatches for the logo that match colors from the inks you're using. For example, printer #1 is using Pantone 15-1337, which matches one of the colors from the swatch. Print your swatch to a letter-sized piece of paper and you can see that the swatch is saturated, which means it matches the inks you're using.
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