Monochrome printing, color printing, and spot color printing for brochure printing
Single color printing, color printing, and spot color printing for brochure printing. Printed materials are divided into monochrome printing, color printing, and spot color printing.
Monochrome printing is a printing method that is limited to any color and can only express variations in depth under the same color. Color printing can print full-color images.
Color printing mostly uses color separation plates to reflect various hues, and the color plates are generally composed of four-color network plates of red (M), yellow (Y), blue (C), and black (K). The hue of the color separation version can be directly indicated by text based on the principle of color separation, indicating the number of CMYK dots in the color spectrum. When special colors are needed, that is, when using special colors other than these four colors, a special color version should be set up.
The color identification of the spot color version can specify a certain hue in the color spectrum, specifically debugging that each of us may have different understandings of the same color, and we also have many speculations about the colors set in the computer. Therefore, in the printing process, we rely on PANTONE to ensure the color obtained after printing.
The PANTONE system is a standard color book in fan-shaped format, which displays the printing effects of glossy copperplate paper, offset paper, and matte copperplate paper, allowing us to directly see the results after use.
PANTONE is labeled with unique numbers or names according to the chromatographic sequence, and the percentage of ink blending formula is also indicated on it to ensure uniform color mixing.

Monochrome printing, color printing, and spot color printing for brochure printing