"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I would greyscale the png and apply the appropriate spot color to the shape in Illustrator. You might want to adjust the levels within Photoshop first to get the appropriate K values. A handy plug-in I use for Illustrator is Phantasm by Astute Graphics. It gives you Photoshop-like color controls within Illustrator. It's not entirely necessary if you have Photoshop, rather just a workflow convenience. If you need it underbased, you could curve/level a duplicate object. Alternatively, You could bitmap halftone the shape in Photoshop and make a chocked underbase as well. Or a third option, use the .ai file I made that is just a outlined starburst with a blurred stroke.
I saw a tut awhile back on this very subject about creating an underbase in illy and having it print correct, let me look and see if I can find it again and post.
I saw a tut awhile back on this very subject about creating an underbase in illy and having it print correct, let me look and see if I can find it again and post.I think this is the one I found and look at been awhile https://youtu.be/rma7AtJ9SJA
Quote from: Jay Kay on November 22, 2016, 04:58:46 PMI would greyscale the png and apply the appropriate spot color to the shape in Illustrator. You might want to adjust the levels within Photoshop first to get the appropriate K values. A handy plug-in I use for Illustrator is Phantasm by Astute Graphics. It gives you Photoshop-like color controls within Illustrator. It's not entirely necessary if you have Photoshop, rather just a workflow convenience. If you need it underbased, you could curve/level a duplicate object. Alternatively, You could bitmap halftone the shape in Photoshop and make a chocked underbase as well. Or a third option, use the .ai file I made that is just a outlined starburst with a blurred stroke.We output everything from Illy (better control than PS IMO) and one thing our dude hates is that if you create a vector underbase in Illy when you go toprint it will be knocked out as it's under other spot colors and won't print. Does Phantasm allow you to change that option? That would save us someserious time. I'ma have him download the trial to find out but I thought I'd ask first.
not too sure what the problem is. Where does this thing go in the art?