Semple’s anger is typical of the design community. Adobe’s chief product officer, Scott Belsky, has tweeted that Pantone asked Adobe to remove the colors, “as they want to charge customers directly.” Why that happened was never certain rumors spread that it was over the cost of including Pantone in Adobe software, while Pantone publicly said that it felt Adobe wasn’t keeping pace with the plethora of new colors it released. In December 2021, Adobe announced it would be removing Pantone colors from its app. The change is the latest twist in a long-running dispute between the design software giant and the color-standard-setting organization. The result? Where once there were vibrant hues there is now only the color black. Scores of Photoshop and Illustrator users who have used certain Pantone color collections in their works have recently been confronted with the fallout of a disagreement between Adobe and Pantone. And it worked just fine-until last week, when everything went dark. This color standardization process means that, for example, a poster made in Adobe InDesign looks exactly the same when it’s printed out as a giant billboard. Since the 1950s, the company Pantone has helped designers match the colors they see onscreen to what they see in the real world.
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