Note that Pantone Black C is not the same as Pantone Black U or Pantone+ Black C or Pantone+ Black U. If you are doing a lot of copy/pasting between documents, using different names for swatches, or ensuring the color definitions for the swatches are all the same will prevent the conflict dialog from being initiated. It's a good idea to keep an eye on what's happening with colors when you copy/paste. Most users really don't want to disable this permanently. The next time there's a swatch conflict you will see the same dialog and be presented with the same choice. Which ever of the above options you choose the same decision will be used for all swatch conflicts in this instance. You can always reassign different colors after you've pasted.Īpply to All means just that. This is helpful if you want to ensure all the color of the art you are pasting remains unchanged. So, after you paste, you'll have additional swatches - such as Pantone Black C and Pantone Black C 2. This can result in colors changing for the pasted art.Īdd Swatches means you want to keep the colors all the same, and you want to change the names of the swatches associated with the art you are pasting. So, you are telling Illustrator to discard the pasted art colors and redefine those colors based on swatches of the same name in the document. But although the names are the same, the color definitions are different.Ĭhoosing Merge will make the pasted art use the color from the existing swatch in the document, not the art you are pasting. The conflict means you have 2 swatches with identical names - one in the document already and one associated with the art you are pasting. A decision must be made and Illustrator will not make it for you (thankfully). It is not an error message, it's a workflow message asking you how you want to handle the issue. You don't really "get rid" of that message. ![]()
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