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Nice print Jason Dan, you can image a 55 line halftone, 70/30 elliptical at 29 degrees. Jason advise is key here, use your RIP to use all tonal values in a 10-85 range to image on a coarser thin thread mesh. How that mesh is captured is key to preventing moire. If angled slightly on the screen during gluing or how the rollers take up the mesh on a retensionable can angle the threads as well. Then how the mesh maintains a square opening is also important.My friend in China images 50 line at 61 degrees on a 135/S mesh from Murakami. Al
I adjust the curve in the rip so the 99% tones actually come out at 85... basically before we had a densitometer we would just print a 0 to 100% scale and adjust the rip till we had a nice smooth transition from 0 to 100.Then adjust the contrast curve in the art to match what is coming out on print.
Quote from: jvanick on August 20, 2016, 03:50:14 PMI adjust the curve in the rip so the 99% tones actually come out at 85... basically before we had a densitometer we would just print a 0 to 100% scale and adjust the rip till we had a nice smooth transition from 0 to 100.Then adjust the contrast curve in the art to match what is coming out on print.Would I be correct in assuming you can save that particular profile in your RIP to call us as needed? So you don't have reset your RIP for other jobs?Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on August 22, 2016, 03:15:00 PMQuote from: jvanick on August 20, 2016, 03:50:14 PMI adjust the curve in the rip so the 99% tones actually come out at 85... basically before we had a densitometer we would just print a 0 to 100% scale and adjust the rip till we had a nice smooth transition from 0 to 100.Then adjust the contrast curve in the art to match what is coming out on print.Would I be correct in assuming you can save that particular profile in your RIP to call us as needed? So you don't have reset your RIP for other jobs?SteveI'll answer that for the newer I-Images. I don't know much about the I-Block.For the I-Images and its RIP, yes. You can save a curve compensation or "clip" for specific types of jobs. Let's say 65lpi on 300 mesh would get one time of curve. You can then create a folder setup, to where you drop the art into that folder, knowing that you want that curve applied. That's it. The curve gets applied and your off and running. No other settings to change, do it once, and then drop what you want into that folder setup.
Quote from: Dottonedan on August 22, 2016, 03:23:04 PMQuote from: Sbrem on August 22, 2016, 03:15:00 PMQuote from: jvanick on August 20, 2016, 03:50:14 PMI adjust the curve in the rip so the 99% tones actually come out at 85... basically before we had a densitometer we would just print a 0 to 100% scale and adjust the rip till we had a nice smooth transition from 0 to 100.Then adjust the contrast curve in the art to match what is coming out on print.Would I be correct in assuming you can save that particular profile in your RIP to call us as needed? So you don't have reset your RIP for other jobs?SteveI'll answer that for the newer I-Images. I don't know much about the I-Block.For the I-Images and its RIP, yes. You can save a curve compensation or "clip" for specific types of jobs. Let's say 65lpi on 300 mesh would get one time of curve. You can then create a folder setup, to where you drop the art into that folder, knowing that you want that curve applied. That's it. The curve gets applied and your off and running. No other settings to change, do it once, and then drop what you want into that folder setup.I think you're talking about CTS RIP's and I'm talking about AccuRIP. What would one do to the other 18 steps in the RIP? Or would they adjust themselves? A trick I learned, to do it in Photoshop, was to open Curves, double click the "black" eyedropper, which opens up the " color picker"; set the K (lower right) to 85, and click OK; then, do the same with the "white" eyedropper, and set the K to 8, and click OK. Then click on the whitest part of the image with the white eyedropper to make it 8%, and click on the blackest part of the image with the black eyedropper to make it 85%. Same result? I know with the Photoshop version, the rest of the curve adjusts, but have never tried it in AccuRIP to see if it does...Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on August 22, 2016, 03:45:43 PMQuote from: Dottonedan on August 22, 2016, 03:23:04 PMQuote from: Sbrem on August 22, 2016, 03:15:00 PMQuote from: jvanick on August 20, 2016, 03:50:14 PMI adjust the curve in the rip so the 99% tones actually come out at 85... basically before we had a densitometer we would just print a 0 to 100% scale and adjust the rip till we had a nice smooth transition from 0 to 100.Then adjust the contrast curve in the art to match what is coming out on print.Would I be correct in assuming you can save that particular profile in your RIP to call us as needed? So you don't have reset your RIP for other jobs?SteveI'll answer that for the newer I-Images. I don't know much about the I-Block.For the I-Images and its RIP, yes. You can save a curve compensation or "clip" for specific types of jobs. Let's say 65lpi on 300 mesh would get one time of curve. You can then create a folder setup, to where you drop the art into that folder, knowing that you want that curve applied. That's it. The curve gets applied and your off and running. No other settings to change, do it once, and then drop what you want into that folder setup.I think you're talking about CTS RIP's and I'm talking about AccuRIP. What would one do to the other 18 steps in the RIP? Or would they adjust themselves? A trick I learned, to do it in Photoshop, was to open Curves, double click the "black" eyedropper, which opens up the " color picker"; set the K (lower right) to 85, and click OK; then, do the same with the "white" eyedropper, and set the K to 8, and click OK. Then click on the whitest part of the image with the white eyedropper to make it 8%, and click on the blackest part of the image with the black eyedropper to make it 85%. Same result? I know with the Photoshop version, the rest of the curve adjusts, but have never tried it in AccuRIP to see if it does...SteveTo me, I believe that if you do this as you described, Yes, that 85% does "lean towards" fills in at 85%...but your true solid areas will also come out at 85% halftone. Here then, you are hoping for fill in and maybe in some cases, intentionally laying it down heavier on press than anticipated (at what should already be solids).