David, define your color as Pantone 390C, specify spot color, and use the CMYK 
representation as the definition.

Arnis may jump in to explain when Windows stopped bolloxing the colors, but 
with Win7, you should have no problems with the file.

Doing a Save as PDF, using the Adobe PDF print driver should respect the spot 
color in the PDF, and if sent to a CMYK device, respect the color you defined 
in the doc.

Try all of this and let me know if it doesn't work as promised.



-Matt

Matt R. Sullivan 
co-author Publishing Fundamentals: Unstructured FrameMaker 11 
P: 714.798.7596 | C: 714.585.2335 | matt at mattrsullivan.com 

@mattrsullivan LinkedIn facebook mattrsullivan.com 


On Jul 29, 2013, at 4:32 AM, "Davis, David" <David.Davis at invensys.com> wrote:

> Here?s one of those nefarious color questions

> I?m using FrameMaker 11
> 
> I?m doing a doc where the company?s branding guidelines ask for a squiggly 
> line in a particular colour.
> They?re asking for ?Pantone 390C?
> 
>  
> So, if I go to View > Colour > Definitions, then Colour Definitions, I can 
> chose ?PANTON? Coated? from the list. 

> However, the dialog this brings up is offering colours with a ?CVC? suffix. 

> The Branding Guide I?m using also has a suggest CYMK match for the Pantone 
> colour. 
> 
> Does this actually work though? Or will Frame still turn the spot-ink named 
> Pantone into an RGB value when distill it to a PDF?
> 
> Regards,
> David


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