Thank you all for your input. As I was stressed for time, I have asked a friend at some University to convert my eps-file into an PDF/X-4 with valid Pantone color codes.
I had done the typography in Scribus because Inkscape is rather bad for text and copied the text over to Inkscape to add a logo and export as eps. This has not solved my Scribus problem, but has allowed me to place the order. Will report, if I ever find a working solution, where I can regularly prepare my own silk-screen orders in Scribus. greetings, Martin On 19/10/2020 18:41, Bert Driehuis wrote: > I noticed that the "How to use spot colors with Scribus" Wiki page has > gone, but common wisdom for using Pantone is that the name of the > color must match the Pantone name exactly. You can use Edit Colours > and Fills in 1.5.5, and create new colors with Add. Under Name, use > the exact Pantone name. Tick "Is Spot Color". The exact CMYK values > are not important, use a color the helps you. > > I've never used Spot colors in Scribus myself. > > With kind regards, > > Bert > > On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 6:05 PM ZASKE Martin <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Hello List, >> >> I have used Scribus 1.5.5 to prepare a file to be silk-screen-printed >> unto t-shirts. >> >> Now I am stuck with the online order: >> >> The print-shop will print with special fabric-ink and their >> online-order-mask gives a choice of colours, all referenced by the >> Pantone Solid Coated series. For example we want our text printed in >> "PANTONE Yellow 012 C". >> >> So I do not care what it looks like on my screen; I have 255 233 0 as an >> approximation to show my team. >> >> But our online affordable printer, is needing the color-information >> encoded into our PDF/X-4 file because they offer many different colours >> and their order-process is fully automated. >> >> I have looked through this list and seen some hacks on how to handle >> Pantone-equivalents with basically RGB swatches, but our need is all >> different. >> >> >> >> I also just created an export to PDF/X-4 and opened it with my best >> editor. I can read but I see no obvious structure. When I needed, I >> boldly edit Scribus .sla files, but those are "nice" compared to this >> PDF syntax. >> >> >> >> It would be a shame after all those years with Scribus, to rob a bank >> and get InDesign, just to convert my (already designed) T-shirt document >> for the print-shop-upload. >> >> Any ideas? >> >> >> Thank you, greetings, >> >> Martin >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> -- >> ZASKE Martin >> responsable GʊGʊ >> BP 50 - Bassila - Bénin >> tel GʊGʊ 66.66.11.11 >> tel pers 97.44.62.95 >> >> ___ >> Scribus Mailing List: [email protected] >> Edit your options or unsubscribe: >> http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus >> See also: >> http://wiki.scribus.net >> http://forums.scribus.net > > ___ > Scribus Mailing List: [email protected] > Edit your options or unsubscribe: > http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus > See also: > http://wiki.scribus.net > http://forums.scribus.net > -- ZASKE Martin responsable GʊGʊ BP 50 - Bassila - Bénin tel GʊGʊ 66.66.11.11 tel pers 97.44.62.95 ___ Scribus Mailing List: [email protected] Edit your options or unsubscribe: http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus See also: http://wiki.scribus.net http://forums.scribus.net
