Creative Work

ColorDigital - Digital Transformation in the Textile and Fashion Industry

The international textile and fashion industry has relied on global production operations for decades, more than almost any other industry. At the same time, the pace for new collections has picked up significantly. However, contrary to people’s expectations, the pinking shears as a symbol of the physical shipping of cut-out fabric samples or even entire batches still play a decisive role today. ColorDigital from Cologne, Germany, is aiming to develop a digital solution for sampling and quality control processes. To do so, the company is relying fully on EIZO ColorEdge monitors.
 

colordigital_img001 colordigital_img002
   

Digital Transformation

Nearly all fashion houses and their suppliers are currently dealing with the topic of digital transformation. They are seeking a method in which they can exchange colors, textures, patterns, images and 3D objects, thus enabling a large part of the design, sampling and quality control processes to be carried out digitally. The advantage is obvious. For one, you eliminate the need for countless courier shipments, which is quite time-consuming; for another, you can reduce the back and forth of sending things through the mail.


“It is crucial that designers, product developers, brands and producers involved come together on a common platform and speak a common (color) language in order for a consistent and meaningful digital sampling process to be possible at all.”

Olaf Kölling
Managing Director, ColorDigital


 

colordigital_img003

And this is exactly what the DMIx Cloud from ColorDigital offers. As a partner of the German Fashion Institute, known by its German abbreviation as DMI, the Cologne-based company is deeply rooted in the fashion industry and knows its needs quite well. ColorDigital was founded in 2013 and has since worked to create the ideal digital hub that the fashion and textile industry needs to successfully complete the digital transformation. The biggest challenge is the required “common language”. The objective nature of these colors is the top priority and the most important success factor of the whole concept, since the colors of materials or fabrics are always strongly dependent on the light with which they are illuminated and, in general, color perception is a comparatively subjective matter.
 

Digital Hub: DMIx Cloud

“We exchanged color information in the DMIx Cloud – exclusively in spectral values from the very beginning to make the workflow independent of different lighting situations,” says Kölling, explaining the core of the ColorDigital solution. The lighting used is no longer a factor. The various color management systems of different operating systems, browsers and devices is another source of error. In this regard, ColorDigital has succeeded in creating a color-accurate and consistent workflow using online and desktop applications. However, it is no longer just color information that is in the cloud; in the meantime, textures and images are also being hosted. In addition to pure color information, surface properties, such as glare behavior and three-dimensional textures, can be digitally captured.

colordigital_img004
EIZO as part of the Digital Textile Connection
 

The Monitor as the Visual Core of the DMIx Cloud

“You can have all the precision in the world for the data captured. It doesn’t matter. Visual sampling is inconceivable unless you have a monitor that displays the desired data without any distortion whatsoever and covers the widest possible gamut in order to be able to display as many of the colors that are stored in the digital assets as possible,” says Gerd Willschütz, Managing Director of ColorDigital. He adds: “Which is why we have been using ColorEdge monitors from EIZO right from the start and also have been recommending them to our customers.” The wide gamut of the ColorEdge wide-gamut monitors also enables the display of particularly saturated colors. In addition, the 16-bit 3D look-up-table (LUT) and 10-bit color display guarantee perfectly smooth and fluid gradients. The Digital Uniformity Equalizer ensures a homogeneous image representation over the entire display area of the monitor and thanks to the five-year warranty with the on-site replacement service, the TCO also remains calculable. The CG series monitors, in particular, are perfect for use as reference monitors in digital sampling. Calibration, which is required regularly, can be automated due to the built-in calibration sensors for hardware calibration, thus reducing the required administration and support effort to an absolute minimum. Central administration of ColorEdge monitors using the ColorNavigator 7 calibration software has proven to be particularly useful in companies with multiple color-accurate workstations.


“We work closely with EIZO and are in the process of integrating color management features such as the hardware calibration of EIZO monitors into our solutions. We are pleased to have EIZO onboard as a strong partner in the Digital Textile Connection.”

Gerd Willschütz
Managing Director, ColorDigital

colordigital_img005


colordigital_img006
EIZO monitors as the central core of the DMIx Cloud.
 

Digital Textile Connection: An Alliance of Companies

Yet, in addition to the central cloud and the associated online and desktop solutions and EIZO ColorEdge monitors, other hardware and software components are required for this complex workflow to work. In order to be able to offer customers an uncomplicated, end-to-end solution, the other companies have therefore joined forces to form the Digital Textile Connection, an alliance of companies. Through this partnership, the market and innovation leaders in the industry have united to offer users of the DMIx Cloud an end-to-end, worry-free package from data capture to display and output – one that works without complications or major technical problems.

X-rite offers several solutions to capture data on color information and material properties, ranging from a simple spectrophotometer to a highly complex TAC7 scanner. In addition, there is the Virtual Light Booth, a 3D visualization solution by x-rite. The software specialist Assyst offers Vidya, its specialty software for the virtual modelling of textile structures. Epson offers numerous printers for sublimation printing in order to make digitally transferred patterns physically tangible immediately after digital dispatch, so there is no need to wait for the mail. Peter Büdel GmbH from Laufach, Germany, is a perfect example of how the digital workflow can work in the DMIx Cloud. The company specializes in accessory solutions and can provide its customers with tailored products extremely quickly, thanks to the speed and flexibility offered by the digital workflow.
 

End-to-End Solution for the Digital Workflow – Strides into the Future

Together with its partners from the Digital Textile Connection, ColorDigital has managed to develop a solid end-to-end, worry-free package that makes digital transformation and networking a cinch for companies in the fashion and textile industry, enabling them to react to the increasingly rapid demands of the market and to maintain or even expand their market position in the future. Potential customers from the textile industry have nearly the entire line-up available in ColorDigital’s showroom in Rheinauhafen, an urban regeneration project in Cologne, to help them select the right ColorEdge monitors for their specific needs.

 

Deployed Products


 

ColorEdge
Case Studies