Barry wrote:
Don't rely on what you see on a monitor either.
Good point, Barry. Professional photographers and graphics designers,, and serious amateurs, have to learn all about a color calibrated workflow which requires color profiling of all devices. One example monitor calibration tool is the Sypder5 from datacolor:
http://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/product-overview/spyder5-family/
You can print special test prints on your printer and send it off to get a custom color profile for the printer as well, which combined with a profile for the specific paper, lets you get the best match possible from your equipment.
But all of that is within the constraints of the color gamut that each device can reproduce - some colors cannot be faithfully reproduced on all devices because of color space limitations of the actual hardware or inks.
Unfortunately, the best organized architect can get their presentation totally color-calibrated, and then show up in a conference room with a non-calibrated projector.
😉
[An aside on the original question of matching a paint chip: some paint manufacturers give the CMYK or RGB values for their chip on the back, or on their web site, which at least lets you get the closest digital coding of the color into your model so that it WOULD appear as correct as possible on any calibrated monitor. This would potentially be more accurate than scanning the chip (your scanner probably isn't calibrated), or trying to match the chip visually (on your non-calibrated monitor).]
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