"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Tight. It's crazy how difficult it can be to view channel seps properly in CS programs, I wish that wasn't so and they had a "pre-press" suite or something.
Quote from: ZooCity on December 10, 2011, 02:35:46 PMTight. It's crazy how difficult it can be to view channel seps properly in CS programs, I wish that wasn't so and they had a "pre-press" suite or something. I don't know how everyone else does it, but I use Adobe CS5 and channels seps in Photoshop. When I get a sep file to match the original att side by side, that is how I get great results on press. When it matches what I see, I know it's a winner. Other times, I have to do some things that I know I can't see in the file, like dropping a percent of process blue straight on to a black shirt. I have an idea, but won't know the exact results till it hits the press. Much of that is just experience.
Dan is on it! I also do a side by side comparison and get great results. You do need an understanding of screen printing and opacities of color, the strength of a pigment and how it will overtake a design when mixing, how much white is mixed with that particular color. Oh, hell!! I'm not even scratching the surface. . . As Dan says it comes down to experience and knowledge. If you have that, your odds of having a successful print will be better. Me? Maybe 95% of the time I have success. Sometimes there is a problem and the solution is on the press. Other times it is the seps. But rarely, and a very small fix. You just gotta be fast at determining the problem, fixing it and getting it back on the press. Yes, I make mistakes.Regardless, no software separation program out there can equal what goes on in the right side of your brain, or equal the keen vision that you need to do this kind of work, or exponentially make decisions on the fly! You can listen to books on tape and let someone else read the story while you press pause, rewind or play. You don't even need to know how to read. . . Same with the separation software. If you have Photoshop and Illustrator, then you have all that you need to do separations for T-shirts.
I'm curious, do you guys ever color sep to a color, hi-res printout/proof or is it always just sep to the artwork on the screen? Or, that's ridiculous! A color proof printout always travels with the job as a guide for the printer.