Luxury leather boots and bags displayed under perfect D65 daylight with Pantone TCX guides – the gold standard of color consistency in footwear
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Pantone TCX vs TPX: The Global Color Language of Footwear and Leather Industry

Why Perfect Color Matching Is a Multi-Million Dollar Issue

A shade difference on a leather sneaker upper can lead to the rejection of an entire production run. In today’s global supply chain, designers in Paris, tanneries in Italy, and factories in Vietnam must all speak the exact same color language.

That language is Pantone Fashion, Home + Interiors (FHI) — and its two most famous extensions are TCX and TPX.

What Do the Abbreviations Actually Mean?

AbbreviationFull FormMeaning in Practice
TCXTextile Cotton eXtendedColors printed/dyed on 100 % cotton fabric swatches
TPXTextile Paper eXtendedColors lacquered on high-quality paper cards


These are not random letters — they tell you exactly what physical medium the color is shown on.

FeaturePantone TCX (Cotton)Pantone TPX (Paper)
SubstrateDyed cotton fabricLacquered paper
Total Colors2,6252,310 (frozen – no new colors added since 2023)
Primary UsersTanneries, dye houses, factories, QC labsDesigners, CAD teams, merchandising, presentations
Behavior on Leather/TextileExtremely accurate — cotton absorbs dye like real materialsOnly an approximation — paper reflects light differently
Light FastnessExcellentPoor (fades quickly)
Current Status (2025)Actively updated + new colors released hereOfficially discontinued for new colors
Replacement for TPXNew FHI Paper + Polyester TPG


Bottom line: TCX is the production truth. TPX was only ever a design communication tool.

Official Pantone FHI System Overview

Global footwear supply chain relying on single Pantone TCX reference
One Pantone TCX code connects designers in Paris with factories in Asia

How Global Brands Actually Use TCX & TPX

  1. Designer selects 18-1438 TCX Marsala using the cotton guide or Pantone Connect
  2. Tech pack states: “All leather and textile components must match 18-1438 TCX ± ΔE 1.0 under D65”
  3. Tannery matches leather using TCX cotton swatch + spectrophotometer
  4. Factory QC checks final shoes in a D65 viewing booth against the same TCX swatch
Pantone TCX cotton swatch vs TPX paper swatch – same color code, completely different appearance
Why factories only trust TCX cotton (left) – paper TPX (right) is no longer acceptable

No serious brand accepts TPX for production approval anymore.

The Science of Lighting: Why D65 Is Non-Negotiable

Metamerism = two samples match under one light source but look different under another.

Pantone’s strict rule: All TCX and legacy TPX evaluations must be done under D65 (6500 K) artificial daylight in a neutral gray booth.

Factories that approve colors under cheap fluorescent or warm LED lights are gambling with rejection.

Same leather boot under wrong lighting (left) vs correct D65 daylight (right)
Metamerism explained – the reason D65 daylight is mandatory for Pantone approvals

Other Color Systems Explained (And Why They Don’t Replace Pantone)

SystemFull NameMediumTypical Use in Footwear & LeatherWhy It’s Not Enough
CMYKCyan, Magenta, Yellow, Key (Black)Ink on paperShoe boxes, hangtags, catalogs, marketingInk on paper cannot simulate dye on leather or fabric
RGBRed, Green, BlueScreen lightWebsites, apps, 3D renders, e-commerce photosEvery screen shows a different version; no physical link
RALReichs-Ausschuss für Lieferbedingungen (German committee)Powder-coated metal & plasticRubber soles, metal eyelets, plastic hardwareOnly ~2,200 colors, very industrial, no fashion focus
NCSNatural Color SystemPerceptual modelArchitecture, interiors, some Scandinavian brandsTheoretical system; almost zero adoption in Asia factories
LabCIE Lab*MathematicalSpectrophotometer measurements (used WITH Pantone)Not a communication tool — only a measurement system


Verdict: CMYK, RGB, RAL, NCS and Lab are excellent for their own purposes, but none of them can replace Pantone TCX when you need a designer in Europe and a tannery in Asia to see the exact same color.

Professional color matching lab using D65 booth and Pantone TCX standards
footwear color approval lab – where TCX and D65 rule

Practical Recommendations from Industry Experts

  1. Always specify TCX in tech packs
  2. Require ΔE ≤ 1.0 under D65 (CMC 2:1 formula)
  3. Use Pantone Connect Premium for digital TCX values
  4. Invest in a proper D65 viewing booth (X-Rite Judge QC or JUST Normlicht)
  5. For PU/vegan leather, switch to the newer TPX (Textile Polyester eXtended) system

Pantone Connect – Digital Color Platform

Final Takeaway

  • TCX = Textile Cotton eXtended → the only acceptable production standard for leather, textiles and footwear
  • TPX = Textile Paper eXtended → legacy design tool, no longer updated
  • D65 daylight → the only light under which Pantone colors are legally judged
  • Pantone FHI system → still the undisputed universal color language of the global footwear and leather industry

Master these rules and you’ll eliminate 95 % of color-related rejections and delays.

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