While sign shops and other wide-format. Achieving Common Appearance. Wide-format Printing

Similar documents
all inkjet printers think this way since changing the ink in the machine is a timeconsuming

Spectral data communication from prepress to press

How G7 Makes Inkjet Color Management Better. Jim Raffel Some slides have been adapted from and are used with permission of SGIA and MeasureColor.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) Pertaining to G7,GRACoL and ISO

Colour Theory Basics. Your guide to understanding colour in our industry

How G7 Makes Inkjet Color Management Better

Substrate Correction in ISO

PRESS FOR SUCCESS. Meeting the G7 Color Challenge

PantoneLIVE Library Validation Study

Colours and Control for Designers. This article is supported by...

ISO Prin.ng from digital data across mul.ple technologies. " Mr. David McDowell

Océ Color Control Suite A NEW PATH TO CONSISTENT COLOR

Terms. Color Hue. Spot color Flood Value Density RGB. Pantone Duotone Hexachrome CMYK Gamut. Toyo/Trumatch

Spectro-Densitometers: Versatile Color Measurement Instruments for Printers

Color is the factory default setting. The printer driver is capable of overriding this setting. Adjust the color output on the printed page.

Conformance to Substrate-corrected Dataset, a Case Study

Implementing Process Color Printing by Colorimetry

UPWORD. Conciliating ISO Standards and Working Practices. Elie Khoury RIT Gravure Day March (Universal Printing WOrkflows Diagram)

:JETI 3020 TITAN. The ultimate upgradeable high resolution production UV-inkjetprinter wíth Flat To Roll option.

SNAP Certification. 1/013/14 Version 1

INTERNATIONAL PRINTING STANDARDS, A VALUE-ADDED PROPOSITION*

PRINTING QUALITY ENHANCEMENT ACCORDING TO ISO (APPLYING IN ONE OF EGYPTIAN PRINTING-HOUSES) Nasr Mostafa Mohamed Mostafa

An Investigation of Factors Influencing Color Tolerances

Chapter Objectives. Color Management. Color Management. Chapter Objectives 1/27/12. Beyond Design

G7 Master & G7 Process Control Master Pass/Fail Requirements

Deliverable 5.2. Quality Control Guidelines Doc 4 technical paper for professionals. EMSPI: Energy Management Standardization in Printing Industry

INFLUENCE OF THE RENDERING METHODS ON DEVIATIONS IN PROOF PRINTING

Quality Levels for Colour Reproduction

What s new in presssign version 8

How Big Is Color? John Seymour* Keywords: Halftone, Scanning, Moiré, Screening, Fourier, Resolution, Colorimetry. Abstract

IFRA-Check: Evaluation of printing quality on the basis of worldwide valid standards. Instructions

The Technology of Duotone Color Transformations in a Color Managed Workflow

Graphic technology Process control for the production of halftone colour separations, proof and production prints. Part 2:

ISO INTERNATIONAL STANDARD. Graphic technology Colour and transparency of printing ink sets for fourcolour

DENSITOMETRY. By Awadhoot Shendye

HP Designjet Z2100 and Z3100 Printers Deliver Professional Quality, Durable Prints

color management Esko 1. Spectrally based 2. Predict real ink on substrate 3. Address today s color challenges 4.

Adding Dimension to Your Monochrome Images

How to check Print Standards

Conformance of Indian Newsinks to ISO

PRINTER S GUIDE TO G7

Predicting the unpredictable in a Pantone world. Garett Long Commercial Technologist Southern Graphic Systems

Color Models: RGB vs CMYK

Save Time and Money by Producing Your Own Full-Colour Product Labels

HD Flexographic Artwork Guide Our Guarantee to the Best Reproduction of your Brand

Color Management and Your Workflow. monaco

Color Management For A Sign Maker. An introduction to a very deep subject.

Matching Proof and Print under the Influence of OBA

Unit 8: Color Image Processing

Process Control, ISO & ISO 15339

Reduction of Process-Color Ink Consumption in Commercial Printing by Color Separation with Gray Component Replacement

Color Management, Profiles, and Spot Colors. Not Everything There is to Know, but Enough to Get You Started

Running head: AN ANALYSIS OF ILLUMINANT METAMERISM FOR LITHOGRAPHIC SUBSTRATES AND TONE REPRODUCTION 1

How to calibrate a press or proofing system to the new 2005 GRACoL specifications

Quantitative Analysis of Pictorial Color Image Difference

Chapter 11. Preparing a Document for Prepress and Printing Delmar, Cengage Learning

A Statistical analysis of the Printing Standards Audit (PSA) press sheet database

Part 6: Flexographic printing

WORKING WITH COLOR Monitor Placement Place the monitor at roughly right angles to a window. Place the monitor at least several feet from any window

What s new in presssign version 8

G7 System Certification Application Data Sheet

THE 3 BIGGEST MISTAKES TO AVOID WHEN USING GRAPHIC IMAGES IN PRINT

Chapter 4. Incorporating Color Techniques

KODAK VERIS Digital Proofing System

Digital Technology Group, Inc. Tampa Ft. Lauderdale Carolinas

G7 System Certification Application Data Sheet

EXTENDED GAMUT PRINTING. Karan Patel Susan Nguyen Jasmine Ragual Paula Roque

A SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO GRAPHIC ARTS MONTHLY MAY Guidelines & Specifications

ISO INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

color basics theory & application Fall 2013 Ahmed Ansari Communication Design Fundamentals

What s New: SGIA Recap New print shop productivity software. October 2008 Issue

Guide to Digital and Flexographic Printing

Report on generating a colour circle for testing in screenprinting and inkjet

Determining Chromaticness Difference Tolerance of. Offset Printing by Simulation

A New Approximation Algorithm for Output Device Profile Based on the Relationship between CMYK Ink Values and Colorimetric Values

Cartography FieldCarto_Handoff.indb 1 4/27/18 9:31 PM

Image Processing for Mechatronics Engineering For senior undergraduate students Academic Year 2017/2018, Winter Semester

Quantitative Analysis of Tone Value Reproduction Limits

design guide for print

Paper Parameters That Affect Color Reproduction. Danny C. Rich, Ph.D. Sun Chemical Color Research Laboratory

Member of the Academy of Screen Printing Technology

Screening Basics Technology Report

PixaGraphic. PixaGraphic. transforms glass into a creative medium without limitation. Colour matching. Overview

Colour Control for Printed Interiors. This article is supported by...

printcontrol Printing process control at a click of the mouse

Getting Your Gray Balance in Check With G7

Colorimetry vs. Densitometry in the Selection of Ink-jet Colorants

This Color Quality guide helps users understand how operations available on the printer can be used to adjust and customize color output.

For a long time I limited myself to one color as a form of discipline. Pablo Picasso. Color Image Processing

Color theory Quick guide for graphic artists

Chapter 3 Part 2 Color image processing

Roland VersaWorks. Creating Profiles with VersaWorks 3

ISO Gans Ink and Supply Company Keith Duchene

Notes on colour mixing

David Pearson U3A Digital Imaging Group 18 July 2014

Best Practices in Color Reproduction

printcontrol Printing process control at a click of the mouse

Towards a New Age Graphic Design DIGITAL PRINTING

How to reproduce an oil painting with compelling and realistic printed colours (Part 2)

An Analysis of Illuminant Metamerism for Lithographic Substrates and Tone Reproduction

Transcription:

Wide-format Printing Photos courtesy Nazdar Achieving Common Appearance By Bruce Ridge While sign shops and other wide-format print providers have long offered colour matching capabilities, in most cases, the process remains impractical and inefficient. Today, the non-profit International Digital Enterprise Alliance s (IDEAlliance s) G7 methodology for calibration in four-colour process printing instead pursues the goal of common appearance. This will offer significant benefits for both digital printing and analogue commercial printing, in terms of producing images more efficiently. Industry endorsement In January 2010, at the Specialty Graphic Imaging Association (SGIA s) annual Congress of Committees, the graphic production group voted to recommend G7 as the preferred method for the reproduction of full-colour images through inkjet and screenprinting processes. This was noteworthy because signmakers never had a process-colour printing method or specification before that could accommodate the varieties of media, substrates and inks used in their industry. The durable pigments in wide-format graphic inks, for example, can involve very different hues and densities compared to offset printing specifications for colour matching. Such issues had made it difficult to impossible for the industry to reproduce commercial proofing targets. The SGIA endorsement also validated the efforts of early adopters, who had already invested time and money into learning and following the G7 process. New motivation Originally, one of the main motivations for print providers to commit to implementing the G7 methodology in their facilities was the notion that print buyers would soon be demanding it. After all, if a new 60 January 2012 SIGN MEDIA CANADA

GRAPHICS LED Light Boxes with Fabric Graphics Convertible Fabric Stands The G7 methodology still involves measuring colours with a pectrophotometer, which means first learning and understanding the L*a*b* colour space. Flags Table Throws colour control process could help make images appear similar across different printing platforms, formats, resolutions and substrates, who wouldn t want that? Initially, however, the customer demand did not emerge. Instead, what kept interest in G7 alive in the industry were the methodology s immediate benefits in production efficiency and in providing a distinctive way to compare images. So, once these print providers were committed to the process, its true value to production became apparent. The G7 methodology separates and controls the printing of process colour graphics by targeting a neutral print density in the 25, 50 and 75 per cent tonal areas of the image. The result is a common or shared appearance, but G7 is the first colour specification that does not dictate how to get to that final destination; it simply specifies what that destination is. How to get there is up to the print provider s own process and procedures. Hence, G7 is not process-specific and can be applied to all types of printing. A brief history While some inkjet and screenprinting shops also handle offset lithography, most do not, so print standards like Specifications for Web Offset Publications (SWOP) and General Requirements for Applications in Commercial Offset Lithography (GRACoL) which are designed specifically for offset printing s paper, inks and dot gains do not apply well to their in-house processes. So, in the past, wide-format print houses spent a lot of time on colour Tension Fabric Displays T: 416 412 3889 F: 416 412 3893 Hanging Signs Soho Display Packages Alumination Display System www.cheelo.com info@cheelo.com 7400 Victoria Park Ave Unit 6, Markham ON, L3R 2V4

Signmakers have faced difficulties reproducing commercial proofing targets, due to differences in ink hues and densities compared to offset printing specifications for colour matching. matching, i.e. trying to get graphics to appear as close as possible to offset-printed proofs. Unless a graphic is printed with the same process and inks on the same substrate, however, there is always going to be some degree of deviation in colour. Print shops established colour matching departments and hired specialists in an effort to support the industry-wide claim that any colour on a proof could be reproduced accurately. Production departments, however, worked with more toward achieving similar colour, due to restrictions and limitations in terms of time, materials and equipment. This tradition of colour matching was focused on spot colours, based on fabric swatches or the Pantone Matching System (PMS). It became common for print shops to be asked to match very specific corporate colours, such as Coca-Cola red or Pepsi blue. And when directly comparing two solid or spot colours side-by-side, it is easy for the human eye let alone a colour testing system to discern subtle differences between them. This evolved into a science of spot colour matching, requiring the removal of subjectivity from the process. The practice of measuring colours and quantifying them by assigning numbers was developed and became known as spectrophotometry. Even then, however, the mathematical formulas allowed some tolerance of deviation from a standard within a limited range. The L*a*b* colour space became the most common model used to measure colour. This involved assigning numbers to define a given colour s location in the space. It remained difficult, however, to compare two colours within the space, so formulas were developed to help quantify the difference. These formulas did not weigh various colours differently, though the human eye tends to perceive subtle variations at a lower or greater degree in different colours. Two measured greys, for example, will appear more visually different from each other than two bright reds. This is due 62 January 2012 SIGN MEDIA CANADA

For years, large-format printing companies have struggled with customers demanding they print higher line half-tone counts, so their graphics will look better up close. to the way the human eye sees slight colour shift differences in neutral colours. And this is why the G7 methodology is so effective: full-colour images are separated and controlled with neutral greys. On the spot G7 does not assist with spot colour matching or simulation, nor does it use the same substrate white point solid ink densities, dot gain or tone value increase (TVI). Rather, it is designed to control process colour images by setting neutral density curves for cyan, magenta and yellow inks, based on how they are printed individually, as well as together to create the overprint secondary colours. The methodology focuses on balancing the relationship between these three colours in an image where there may be thousands of colours. Most spot colour matching information remains relevant, as G7 still requires the print provider to measure colours with a spectrophotometer, which means first learning and understanding the L*a*b* colour space. The spot colour mentality, i.e. of matching one specific colour to another, however, is not usually the goal of the G7 process. Instead, the goal is to reproduce an image in balance, without any unwanted colour shifts in any part of that image. Complete Cutting Solutions CNC Routing & Knife Solutions For The Graphics Industry Process a massive range of materials using our heavy duty routing spindles and knife head options And this is achieved by letting go of some areas of the image that may not be controllable. This is why G7 is defined as achieving a common appearance between images. Tel: 1 800 361 3408 Email: sales@axyz.com Web: www.axyz.com TM SIGN MEDIA CANADA January 2012 63

In the past, colour matching has relied on swatches and the Pantone Matching System (PMS). The G7 gift G7 has made a major difference in efficiency in printing, particularly screenprinting, where there was more to be gained, given previously slow processes. And for years, large-format screenprinting shops have struggled with customers demanding they print higher line half-tone counts, so their graphics will look better up close. Further gains in production efficiency will continue to be made throughout the industry. Beyond production efficiency, however, the greatest gift offered by G7 is the concept of achieving a common appearance as the target, as opposed to trying to nail an exact match of a proof. There are many reasons why both screenprinting and inkjet printing operations have struggled with that battle in the past and cannot win it. Quite simply, there are too many differences in their processes for them to ever match a commercial 64 January 2012 SIGN MEDIA CANADA

t architectural sign systems Today, almost all proofs are generated on very white paper, even though few wide-format graphics are printed on similarly white substrates. offset proof or even an internal inkjet proof. With G7, they can achieve a common appearance with that proof. From proof to print Proofing systems have always been designed to simulate a final print on a specific type of paper. Today, with almost all proofing being performed using digital inkjet printing systems, most proofs continue to be generated on very white paper, even though few wide-format graphics are ever printed on substrates that are similarly white. The inkjet printers that dominate the proofing market do not use the same inks and pigments as the more durable wide-format inkjet printers that produce the final graphics. So, the hues of the inks are inherently different. Even if all elements in a graphic were somehow identical with those in a proof, there is the issue of size. If a proof is only one-tenth the size of the final graphic, there is no way for the operator or customer to hold up and view the two items at the same proportional distance to ensure they appear the same. So, there is always some kind of visual translation going on between proof and print. Various elements of proofs and prints can be extremely different from each other, including resolution or lines-per-inch (lpi) count, the media white point, the ink and overprint hues, formats, finishes and dot type. So, the introduction of a colour control method that does not force signmakers to try to match these elements, but rather to achieve a common appearance, is very much welcomed by the industry and in itself makes pursuing G7 methodology worth the time and investment. Further, even if some companies do not implement the methodology in-house, the increased acceptance of it throughout the printing community will benefit everyone, as the industry will finally accept the uncommon elements that cannot be matched. Bruce Ridge is director of technical service for Nazdar, which manufactures inks for the wide-format printing industry. For more information, visit www.nazdar.com. SIGN MEDIA CANADA January 2012 65