How to Standardize Color Across Multiple Printers, Locations, and Operators
A Practical Guide to Building a Repeatable, Measurable Color Workflow
If you operate more than one printer — or more than one location — you’ve likely heard some version of this:
- “It looked different at the other shop.”
- “Yesterday it matched. Today it doesn’t.”
- “We calibrated it.”
- “It’s the file.”
When color varies between devices, facilities, or operators, the issue is almost never the file alone. It’s the absence of a standardized system.
Color consistency is not a setting. It’s a managed process.
At Alder Color Solutions, we help print providers, in-plants, and creative production teams build measurable, repeatable color control systems that work across presses, substrates, and staff. Here’s how to standardize color properly — and eliminate drift before it costs you reprints, time, and trust.
Step 1: Define a Single Print Standard
You cannot standardize output if each device is targeting something different.
Start by defining:
- Which print condition you are targeting (FOGRA51, GRACoL 2013, SWOP, etc.)
- Which measurement condition you are using (M0 vs M1)
- Which substrate class you are aligning to
- Which white point you are referencing
Every device, RIP, and proofing system must aim at the same defined target.
If one location is proofing to M1 and another is measuring to M0, you are building inconsistency into the workflow.
Standardization begins with agreement.
Step 2: Use the Same Measurement Hardware and Settings
Spectrophotometers are not interchangeable unless configured identically.
To ensure alignment:
- Use the same instrument model across locations when possible
- Match measurement modes (M0, M1, M2)
- Lock aperture size and measurement conditions
- Establish calibration schedules
If different locations measure differently, they will adjust differently — and output will drift.
Consistency in measurement drives consistency in correction.
Step 3: Calibrate Before You Profile
Many shops profile regularly but rarely recalibrate correctly.
Calibration should address:
- Ink limits
- Linearization
- Total area coverage
- Gray balance
- Media compensation
Profiling captures a condition. Calibration stabilizes it.
If devices are not stabilized first, profiles become snapshots of instability.
Across multiple printers, this step is critical. Each device must be brought into a controlled, repeatable state before ICC profiling.
Step 4: Create Device-Specific Profiles — Not Shared Ones
Even identical printer models behave differently.
Differences include:
- Printhead wear
- Ink batch variation
- Environmental conditions
- Media storage
- Operator settings
Each device should have its own validated ICC profile built to the same print standard.
Do not share profiles across machines and expect identical results.
Standardization does not mean uniform profiles.
It means uniform targets.
Step 5: Implement Closed-Loop Verification
This is where most workflows break down.
Standardization requires ongoing verification, not one-time setup.
Implement:
- Daily or weekly control strip measurement
- Pass/fail tolerances (DeltaE thresholds)
- Automated reporting
- Trend tracking over time
If you do not measure drift, you will not see drift until it becomes visible — and expensive.
Closed-loop systems remove subjectivity from the equation. Operators stop guessing. Managers stop debating. Data decides.
Step 6: Remove Operator Variability
Operators introduce inconsistency when processes are not documented and automated.
Standardize:
- RIP presets
- Media selection naming conventions
- File intake rules
- Rendering intents
- Black generation strategies
- Proofing lighting conditions
Create documented SOPs for every production location.
When two operators interpret instructions differently, output changes.
When workflows are locked and repeatable, color stabilizes.
Step 7: Align Proofing and Production
Many multi-location inconsistencies originate from proofing mismatch.
Ensure:
- Proofing devices are profiled to the same print condition
- Measurement mode matches production standard
- Lighting conditions are D50 compliant
- Substrates are categorized properly (OBA awareness matters)
If your proofing environment differs from your press condition, you are approving color that production cannot match.
Standardization must include approval workflows.
Step 8: Control the Environment
Temperature and humidity affect:
- Ink laydown
- Media behavior
- Dry times
- Color density
Across multiple facilities, environmental variation can introduce measurable color shifts.
Install monitoring systems. Document acceptable ranges. Keep production within specification.
Color science assumes environmental stability. Real-world production must enforce it.
What True Standardization Looks Like
When color is properly standardized across printers and locations:
- A job printed in Portland matches one printed in Phoenix.
- Reprints match original runs months later.
- Operators rely on numbers, not visual judgment alone.
- DeltaE tolerances are predictable.
- Brand colors remain consistent across substrates.
Standardization increases:
- Production efficiency
- Customer confidence
- Profitability
- Scalability
Most importantly, it removes guesswork.
Common Mistakes We See
- Mixing M0 and M1 measurement conditions
- Sharing ICC profiles across devices
- Calibrating inconsistently
- Approving proofs under non-standard lighting
- Measuring sporadically instead of routinely
These issues compound quickly in multi-location operations.
The Alder Approach
At Alder Color Solutions, we design color control systems that scale.
Our process includes:
- Workflow audits
- Device calibration and profiling
- Spectrophotometer configuration
- Print standard alignment
- Closed-loop verification implementation
- Operator training
- Ongoing monitoring systems
Color consistency is not achieved by chance. It is engineered.
If your organization operates multiple printers, brands, facilities, or production teams, standardization is no longer optional. It is foundational to growth.
Bottom Line
If your workflow depends on visual judgment alone, you do not have standardization.
If your devices are not measured against a shared target, you do not have standardization.
If you cannot predict DeltaE results before printing, you do not have standardization.
Standardized color is measurable, repeatable, and scalable.
That is what we build.

