Have you ever struggled with elusive color variations in fashion design? Have you yearned for precise color consistency when building brand identity? As a fundamental element of design language, color directly impacts product market performance and brand value. Pantone, the global leader in color standards, offers a reliable solution through its Fashion, Home + Interiors (FHI) color system.
At the core of the Pantone FHI system lies the Pantone Color Card. These double-layered fabric swatches meet the industry's strictest color specifications, optimized for colorfastness and consistency. Each FHI color card includes digital spectral data to ensure final products match design visions perfectly. The system accommodates various materials including cotton, nylon, and polyester, with 3,049 currently available colors.
Pantone Connect provides exclusive access to over 15,000 Pantone colors across all libraries. This digital platform offers tools for creating, sharing, and saving intelligent palettes while ensuring brand consistency across fashion and product design. Notably, it's the only solution that integrates market-relevant Pantone colors directly into Adobe® design workflows.
In today's competitive market, color drives sales, defines spaces, and creates atmospheres. Pantone applies three critical criteria when selecting FHI colors:
Pantone's six-digit FHI codes enable precise global color communication:
Every FHI color undergoes a five-step quality control process using globally available dyes optimized for colorfastness and consistency. The production tolerances are maintained within 0.5 Delta E for perfect matches.
Pantone employs rigorous measurement protocols:
While all FHI products provide color references, only Pantone Color Cards serve as final standards. These double-layer, unbacked swatches come in light-protective packaging to prevent degradation. For textile applications, TCX (Textile Cotton) references ensure the closest visual matches, as colors appear differently across materials.
Each color carries material-specific suffixes (TCX for cotton, TPG for paper, PQ for plastic). Regular guide updates are essential as handling, light exposure, and market trends can render older references obsolete.
Product selection depends on specific needs: Color Cards serve as absolute standards, while portable sets offer convenience. The comprehensive Pantone textile range addresses diverse professional requirements.