Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Just my .02 here. Quick background... I have been doing color seperations since the winter of 2000. I went through 4 sep programs in 6 months before I gave up in frustration and taught myself how to sep by hand and how to automate the begining portion of what I do, all in order to acheive a superior product.Dan has it right. There is not a single sep program available that you will not have to spend 15 minutes to an hour fixing the results of.I have personally watched several images almost dissapear through push button programs. This is due to the pre-programmed set of curves and adjustments those programs do during thier color generating process.Push button sep programs are all very very very image dependant for the results you want. The brighter and more saturated the image, the better your results are. The more "primary" your colors are (in the RGB computer color spectrum) the better your seperation will be.With that said, the more popular programs have a better user interface. Go with the one that gives you the best customer service and walkthrough.Just understand that you will not be saving as much time as you hope to with your purchase. But yes, you will save some time
Pierre,ICISS is an awesome program akin to photoshop. What Coudray had the programmers of that program do is frikin awesome.Easiest way I can explain it is: It basically allows you to change the RGB color spectrum - Example R:255 G:000 B:000 for a solid RGB red - into a specified color pallet, typically pantone colors that YOU CHOOSE, as many as you want. You want 12 colors, program in 12 colors. You want 7 colors, program in 7 colors. Not just the 6 that are available (internally) in Photoshop. You program the curve adjustments you want each color generated to have and voila! Beginner seps in the color pallet you have asked for. And yes, you still need to tweak them for awesome prints. The seps you get from Coudray are from this program and like Dan said, you still need to tweak them unless you pay extra.A old customer of mine here in Seattle has the program, so I took the chance a few years ago to ask him about it and give me a quick walkthrough. If I could (easily) aford it..... I would get it! I just looked at their site... It contains less info than the last time I looked about 10 years ago. Is it still priced around 10k?End result, a superior seperation tool that quickly gets you to a pre-selected set of colors that you then, with your screen printing knowledge, make into press ready films. But I am not sold on the cost Vs. return for the average shop, you need to be using the program several times a day to see a reasonable return IMO.Colin
Wow!My quote when I was emiling the company directly was just under 10k.... 10 years ago From what I remember of the discussions at the time, the price was flexible depending on the salesman you were talking to. But Mark could very well have the North American rights to distribute the program. The company who makes it is based out of the UK so....However, if you can aford it (eep), you do enough sim-process work, and you want to spend the time to learn an amazing tool for color seperations you may want to pull the trigger.How much high end/sim-process work do you do on a daily/weekly basis?
Dan is often so busy that he can not get to the stuff as soon as I'd like him to. This is not a knock on him, as it always gets done, but it would provide us with a little more flexibility with scheduling.
Pierre,ICISS is an awesome program akin to photoshop. What Coudray had the programmers of that program do is frikin awesome.A old customer of mine here in Seattle has the program, so I took the chance a few years ago to ask him about it and give me a quick walkthrough. If I could (easily) aford it..... I would get it! I just looked at their site... It contains less info than the last time I looked about 10 years ago. Is it still priced around 10k?Colin