The most important concept in print color is dot gain: when ink is applied to paper, it spreads beyond its intended boundary. On uncoated stock, a 50% dot in the plate can print as a 65-75% dot on paper — making the color look significantly darker and more saturated than designed. Coated stocks have much lower dot gain (50% dot ≈ 55-60% on press). The implication: always apply dot gain compensation in your CMYK profiles and always proof on the actual substrate before approving a print run.
Pantone (PMS) colors provide a standardized way to communicate exact color to a printer without relying on CMYK simulation. A Pantone ink is mixed to a specific formula and applied as a single ink, eliminating CMYK dot simulation entirely. The result is more consistent, more predictable color than any CMYK build — especially for colors like vivid oranges, metallics, and fluorescents that cannot be accurately reproduced in CMYK. However, Pantone matching adds cost (each PMS color requires its own ink unit on press), so 4-color process is used for photography and complex illustrations, while Pantone is used for brand colors that need exact reproducibility.
Coated (C) and uncoated (U) Pantone books show the same formula ink on different paper stocks — and the colors look dramatically different. A Pantone 186 C (vivid red) on coated stock will appear more saturated, slightly darker, and with more surface sheen. The same Pantone 186 U on uncoated stock appears more muted, slightly lighter, and without surface reflection. If your product prints on uncoated kraft paper, you must choose your Pantone from the U book, not the C book, even if your brand guidelines specify a C number. Many brand disasters in print come from applying C-book colors to uncoated stocks without adjustment.