(Textile Paper Green), which uses the same color numbering but with more eco-friendly formulations.
You can, but do not trust it. Home printers use CMYK inks. Pantone TPX colors are mixed from 15 base pigments (including dyes like Rhodamine Red). Your printer will "simulate" the color, but it will be inaccurate.
If you need the full and cannot buy the physical book, use Pantone’s Digital Library for Adobe Creative Cloud .
The (Textile Paper Extended) was a specialized segment of the Pantone Fashion, Home + Interiors (FHI) system, primarily used by designers to specify colors for non-fabric materials such as home furnishings, leather, and paint. While once an industry standard, the "TPX" suffix was officially retired in 2015 and replaced by TPG (Textile Paper – "Green"), which features eco-friendly formulations. Accessing Pantone TPX Color Charts (Free PDF Options)
Q: Can I use the Pantone TPX color chart for digital design? A: While the Pantone TPX color chart is primarily designed for print and textile applications, you can use it as a reference for digital design. However, keep in mind that digital screens may display colors differently than physical materials.
Pantone LLC does not officially release free, high-fidelity PDF charts. The physical swatch books (The Pantone Fashion, Home + Interiors Color Guide) cost between $200 and $500 because you are paying for . Pigments on paper look different than RGB (screens) or CMYK (printers).
Pantone announces a "Color of the Year" annually (e.g., Peach Fuzz 13-1023 TCX). Pantone releases a free, one-page PDF press kit for that specific color. You can download that legally from Pantone's official newsroom.
Pantone® TPX charts are proprietary. This tool does not distribute, reproduce, or bypass paywalls for Pantone copyrighted content. Users are directed to Pantone.com or authorized resellers for official physical or digital guides.