Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I don't use Corel, but I believe you asked how to print it from PS, which I think no longer permits you to do that, so DCS might be best IF he wants to import it to Corel. But to print from PS, I think you would split the channels as Dan says, which makes each channel a separate document/file. Then each of those could be converted to a bitmap halftone and printed, but I suspect he'll need his register marks pre-set up in each channel before converting to bitmap halftone. That's what I know anyway...Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on October 17, 2014, 11:10:50 AMI don't use Corel, but I believe you asked how to print it from PS, which I think no longer permits you to do that, so DCS might be best IF he wants to import it to Corel. But to print from PS, I think you would split the channels as Dan says, which makes each channel a separate document/file. Then each of those could be converted to a bitmap halftone and printed, but I suspect he'll need his register marks pre-set up in each channel before converting to bitmap halftone. That's what I know anyway...SteveYeah, I've noticed that clients aren't able to print spot colors directly from PS anymore and I'm having to split the channels. I don't print films, so I'm out of touch on that end of the stick... what happened? Are they trying to get more people to use InDesign or something for output?You can still import a spot color channel PS file directly into Illustrator without having to convert it into a DCS file and still have the spot colors be printable, I believe.
what happened? Are they trying to get more people to use InDesign or something for output?