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<div>If a CxF file comprises spectral colours, you can use these. However, since pure spectral colours are not really useful in a design programme (too complicated to handle), they will be converted to LAB. The feature pays off, however, if you have a palette file with measured colours, where the results including the device settings are saved as spectral colours in the CxF.</div>
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<div>HTH,</div>
<div>Christoph</div>
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<div style="margin:0 0 10px 0;"><b>Gesendet:</b> Samstag, 28. April 2018 um 19:38 Uhr<br/>
<b>Von:</b> "Olivier Berten" <olivier.berten@gmail.com><br/>
<b>An:</b> "Christoph Schäfer" <christoph-schaefer@gmx.de><br/>
<b>Cc:</b> "Scribus User Mailing List" <scribus@lists.scribus.net>, "Create ML" <create@lists.freedesktop.org>, libre-graphics-meeting@lists.freedesktop.org, libreoffice@lists.freedesktop.org, scribus-dev@lists.scribus.net, devel@documentliberation.org<br/>
<b>Betreff:</b> Re: [CREATE] Scribus 1.5.4 Released</div>
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<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0 0 0 0.8ex;border-left: 1.0px rgb(204,204,204) solid;padding-left: 1.0ex;">- Scribus can now handle color palettes in the new ISO standard CxF3 (See: <a href="https://www.xrite.com/de/page/cxf-color-exchange-format" target="_blank">https://www.xrite.com/de/page/cxf-color-exchange-format</a>). CxF3 files cannot only store palettes in different color models (e.g., RGB, CMYK, LAB) and output intents, but also allow for storing spectral colors, which enables even greater colour precision. Scribus is the first DTP software that supports this demanding standard.</blockquote>
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<div class="gmail_extra">Can Scribus actually deal with spectral data or is it just another way to distribute RGB, CMYK or LAB palettes?<br/>
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<div class="gmail_extra">Olivier</div>
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