Chromatone
Lots of boxes in stock.
One of the major priorities for any carpet or rug manufacturer is to keep fully
up to date with colour selections for new range development.
Chromatone is the
'premier' international colour reference system produced and
specifically for use by the carpet trade using a format familiar to all the
industry people, that of an end on dyed yarn or better described as a yarn pom.
Since it's introduction in 1988,
Chromatone has
proved its worth many times over and now provides an excellent colour bank of
1955 poms, each one identified with its own 6 digit number. This enables colours
to be classified and be communicated to anywhere in the world quickly and
efficiently. Each Pom produces an objective description of one unique colour and
taking into account the intermediate numerical spaces, allows the theoretical
specification of almost half a million colours.
Chromatone
details
The 'premier' colour system which, because of the pom format of
presentation, shows mobile 'end-on' yarn colour and therefore its response to
differing directions of light source. 'End-on' yarn colour, as seen by the
consumer in carpeting and other pile fabrics, is deeper and richer than the same
yarn in flat or woven form. Equally, no other colour system (except one other
for cotton), satisfactorily provides a reference standard for other forms of
textured textiles.
Chromatone is
relevant to each of these sectors. Other internationally recognised colour
selection systems are based on print colour or paint chips - ideal for print,
wallcoverings or paint, but too flat and even to be relevant to the depth of
yarn and fibre colour.
The unique 6-digit numbering system allows a common international language of
colour communication, not only within the textile industry, but between the
industry, its clients, its consumers and its suppliers. The
Chromatone colour
system is based on three primary colours: red, yellow and blue, from which all
intermediate colours derive, in order to give an evenly graded full colour
spectrum.
The Chromatone
reference system (the Atlas) comprises 1080 yarn colours divided systematically
into 45 shades of 24 basic hues. All colours have three properties: Hue
(Colour), Value (lightness/darkness) and Chroma (intensity of saturation).
Chromatone
assigns numerical values to these three properties in the 6 digit numerical
system:
Thus: 32 = Hue (colour)
70 = Value (degree of lightness/darkness)
50 = Chroma (intensity of colour saturation)
Chromatone have
deliberately left numerical 'gaps of 3 between each hue (i.e. 04/08/12 etc.) and
9 between each intermediate point (i.e. 10/20/30 to 90), allowing the
theoretical specification of over 472,000 colours. In practice such fine
graduations would be undetectable by the human eye: 1080, provide a truly
comprehensive selection for industry use.
Chromatone
colours can therefore be specified numerically, but also measured by electronic
instrumentation - the most commonly used are spectrophotometers and
colorimeters. Chromatone
yarn poms are specially designed so that when used with Standard Testing
Sleeves, they fit the small aperture of systems such as Datacolour, giving a
standard density of colour which produces LRVs (Light Reflectance Values).
Thus Chromatone
provides an international colour standard, one which is not subject to
individual perceptions and interpretations which can vary wildly - some persons
favour either the red or blue parts of the spectrum and the same persons
perception can vary according to age or even eye fatigue. By the same token,
colours can vary considerably when seen under different light sources - this is
known as 'metamerism' and the most common standards are daylight, tungsten, and
in the UK: TL 84 (Marks & Spencer) and TL83 (BHS). Metamerism is extremely
costly to all colour related textile industries, but
Chromatone can
provide a flying start for a non-metameric match and eliminate the need for
lengthly and expensive trial matching and submissions.
Note: Matching should be carried out under identical light sources,
preferably daylight, and lab dyeings should be split-accepted by clients prior
to bulk production.
By using colour measurement, principal manufacturers of textile dyestuffs
now fully co-operate with the
Chromatone system
to provide a service of CRP (Colour Recipe Prediction) to customers worldwide,
thus eliminating most of the hit-and-miss preliminary work of lab matching.
The full
Chromatone System comprises:-