"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: tonypep on April 17, 2012, 01:52:56 PMMany insist that when you are this serious about resolution and detail, capillary film yields the most consistent results.Agree 100%. What light source do you have?
Many insist that when you are this serious about resolution and detail, capillary film yields the most consistent results.
Quote from: Sbrem on April 17, 2012, 09:22:39 AMI made the mistake of outputting films at 85 LPI for a job that we now print twice a year or so. 355 will do it, with a trade off here and there. We used to have some 420, but really just couldn't get plastisol through it well enough. Good luck.Steve why not just re output the film?
I made the mistake of outputting films at 85 LPI for a job that we now print twice a year or so. 355 will do it, with a trade off here and there. We used to have some 420, but really just couldn't get plastisol through it well enough. Good luck.Steve
Quote from: Printficient on April 17, 2012, 02:03:08 PMQuote from: tonypep on April 17, 2012, 01:52:56 PMMany insist that when you are this serious about resolution and detail, capillary film yields the most consistent results.Agree 100%. What light source do you have?M&R MSP3140Shane
Quote from: cbjamel on April 17, 2012, 02:57:42 PMQuote from: Printficient on April 17, 2012, 02:03:08 PMQuote from: tonypep on April 17, 2012, 01:52:56 PMMany insist that when you are this serious about resolution and detail, capillary film yields the most consistent results.Agree 100%. What light source do you have?M&R MSP3140ShaneI have always said that trying to hold a consistent dot below 10% was not worth the effort as a 5% dot in a blended sep is really not noticeable to the average person, why fight it. With that said doing a print like you're talking about would to me be fun. I love the challenge. A 3140 is a nice unit but emulsive material choice will be critical. Good luck and let me know if there is anything I can do to help. One more thought....DTS?
Quote from: Printficient on April 17, 2012, 04:25:13 PMQuote from: cbjamel on April 17, 2012, 02:57:42 PMQuote from: Printficient on April 17, 2012, 02:03:08 PMQuote from: tonypep on April 17, 2012, 01:52:56 PMMany insist that when you are this serious about resolution and detail, capillary film yields the most consistent results.Agree 100%. What light source do you have?M&R MSP3140ShaneI have always said that trying to hold a consistent dot below 10% was not worth the effort as a 5% dot in a blended sep is really not noticeable to the average person, why fight it. With that said doing a print like you're talking about would to me be fun. I love the challenge. A 3140 is a nice unit but emulsive material choice will be critical. Good luck and let me know if there is anything I can do to help. One more thought....DTS? I'll strongly disagree here. Halftones under 10% are needed to create smooth transitions and subtle color blending. The example I often give out is the gold color. If printing 4CP, it consists of pretty much solid yellow and about 3-4% of magenta. If you can not hold that size dot, your gold will actually look yellow. The only way to introduce that color would be to add separate ink.pierre
Quote from: RStefanick on April 17, 2012, 02:53:45 PMQuote from: Sbrem on April 17, 2012, 09:22:39 AMI made the mistake of outputting films at 85 LPI for a job that we now print twice a year or so. 355 will do it, with a trade off here and there. We used to have some 420, but really just couldn't get plastisol through it well enough. Good luck.Steve why not just re output the film?The customer loved the shirts, and we could repeat it, so we left it alone. When I did a later job for her, we output them correctly (Dan did seps on thatone for me) and they were at 55 lpi. More intense color I feel at the lower lpi. Many years ago, I had a customer bring me his own seps at 100 lpi. I told him "no way", but he insisted, and was willing to pay. They came out sort of OK, all kinds of tonal issues, but if you didn't know the image, you might just buy it. No, I haven't tried it since...Steve
Would you rather hold a smaller dot or a higher LPI? Just a thing I think about from time to time.
From what I've seen- forget about anything over 60lpi on our 4800 w. accurip, it's not even close enough to bother with tweaking the film-ink-droplet-blah-blah-blah.