"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
this will not look good if printed with 4CP. It wold end u p being too grainy since you have large flat areas. Simulated process is the way to go. Get a quote on the seps and tell the customer what it needs to be. They can take it or leave it. Don't set yourself up for a failure!pierre
Ditto on spot colors, you can sep it with PS, too bad the safety orange and machine gold are so close, and would recommend widening the gap between the two, but I could see gold, orange, yellow, blue, white and black, with some serious planning...Steve
Maybe if it was going on white shirts...
Quote from: ScreenFoo on April 19, 2016, 03:10:08 PMMaybe if it was going on white shirts...He shows it on gray, and doesn't have enough press for the highlight white, it's not what I would want to do, but with those restrictions we could pull that off...Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on April 19, 2016, 03:42:40 PMQuote from: ScreenFoo on April 19, 2016, 03:10:08 PMMaybe if it was going on white shirts...He shows it on gray, and doesn't have enough press for the highlight white, it's not what I would want to do, but with those restrictions we could pull that off...SteveYep, and even if it was on white I'd still say 'Maybe'. It all depends on expectations...
...SIMULATED PROCESS or Spot color with halftone blending...
Are your films opaque enough? Thin films can cause issues with proper exposure. (Hold them up to the light...if you can see trough them, maybe look at ways to darken them.
thanks Dan! that sort of advice is quite useful.Quote from: Dottonedan on April 19, 2016, 03:42:07 PM...SIMULATED PROCESS or Spot color with halftone blending... is there are place where these are considered totally different animals, or does the one pretty much blend into the other? Where does spot with halftone blending stop and "sim process" begin?