February 3, 2026

In custom printing, color accuracy isn't a nice-to-have—it's the foundation of trust. When a client approves a design proof, they're making a commitment based on what they see. If the final product doesn't match, the entire relationship suffers. That's why we've invested heavily in color science.
Most printing operations work within a tolerance range. A color that's "close" to what was approved is considered acceptable. In commercial printing for paper—brochures, packaging—this is standard practice. But when you're printing a 10-foot wall mural or a window shade that will be viewed in direct sunlight every day, "close" isn't good enough.
Colors shift depending on the substrate they're printed on. The same image printed on cotton fabric, polyester mesh, and vinyl will look noticeably different. Lighting conditions in the final installation further alter perception. A color that looks perfect under showroom LEDs may read completely differently in a south-facing room flooded with warm afternoon light.
We maintain custom ICC profiles for every fabric in our lineup. These profiles map the precise color gamut achievable on each material with our specific ink system and printing equipment. When we create a design proof, it's rendered through the ICC profile for the client's chosen fabric, so the mockup accurately represents the printed result.
Our proofing monitors are hardware-calibrated monthly using an X-Rite spectrophotometer, and our viewing booth uses D50-standard lighting—the same lighting standard used in professional photography and prepress work.
Different fabrics absorb ink differently. A tightly woven blackout fabric holds detail and color density well. A light-filtering mesh allows more ink to pass through the weave, resulting in softer tones. We calibrate our print settings for each fabric type, adjusting ink density, drop size, and pass count to achieve optimal results.
When we introduce a new fabric to our lineup, it goes through a weeks-long calibration process before we offer it to clients. We print standardized test patterns, measure them with a spectrophotometer, and iterate until the ICC profile accurately predicts output.
For every project, we provide a digital proof rendered through the appropriate ICC profile. For high-value or color-critical projects, we also offer printed fabric swatches—actual samples printed on the final fabric, shipped to the client for review under their actual lighting conditions.
This extra step adds time to the process, but it eliminates the most common source of dissatisfaction in custom printing: the gap between expectation and reality.
In 19 years and over 500 projects, our reprint rate due to color issues is under 1%. That number is the direct result of investing in color science rather than hoping for the best. When we tell a client "what you see is what you'll get," we mean it literally.
We use an ICC color management workflow calibrated to each fabric substrate. Every print job begins with a digital proof reviewed against the original artwork. For critical color applications, we produce a physical fabric proof printed on the actual production fabric—this is the most accurate representation of the final product. Colors are verified with spectrophotometric measurement to ensure deltaE values below 2.0 (imperceptible to the human eye).
Screen displays (RGB) and fabric prints (CMYK) use different color systems, so some variation is inherent. Our digital proofing process simulates the final fabric result as closely as current technology allows. For exact color verification, we strongly recommend requesting a physical fabric proof—a printed sample on your selected fabric that you can evaluate in your actual space under your specific lighting conditions.
OrangePiel's UV-cured inks are significantly more fade-resistant than traditional dye-sublimation prints. Under normal exposure conditions (including direct sunlight through glass), our prints maintain vibrancy for 10+ years. UV-cured inks are chemically bonded to the fabric surface through polymerization, creating a durable, fade-resistant print that doesn't rely on dye penetration.
Yes. We routinely match Pantone (coated/uncoated), RAL, Benjamin Moore, Sherwin Williams, and custom swatches. A physical fabric proof is included at no charge for color-critical projects so you can verify the match in your environment before production begins.
Articles & Insights