"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
in photoshop, import the image and convert to grayscale.in the channels tab, make two copies of the gray channel.leave one as it is.open the curves for the second one and move the bottom point so it removes everything bellow 50% or so. This is your highlight white.The first one is your underbase.use the photoshop to convert it to halftones. You are looking for 22.5 degrees and 40-45 lpi.when printing, back off the pressure a little and try to get it done with one stroke of each color.Start with that, see what happens, post some pictures and we'll help more. This should get you on the right track!pierre
it can be done with one, but will not look as good.take that grayscale channel and reduce the white at 50% down to about 20-25%. Burn the screen and try P/F/P with the same screen. To get good at halftones you have to print them. It is not hard, but you learn the nuances as you go which makes you better and the jobs easier to print.Give this a shot and post some pictures. We'll give you feedback!pierre
A couple of things;First, the Workforce 1100 is discontinued. The ones I have seen for sale on the internet have been asking as much as five times the original price, making the step up to a 1430 (or whatever the designation) much more attractive.Otherwise, at the bargain end, the 1100 replacement is the 7010As for that RIP you need. Ghost will certainly get you started.A couple of things;First, the Workforce 1100 is discontinued. The ones I have seen for sale on the internet have been asking as much as five times the original price, making the step up to a 1430 (or whatever the designation) much more attractive.Otherwise, at the bargain end, the 1100 replacement is the 7010Whatever you go with, I would strongly look into getting either a bulk system or refillable cartridges. I use carts and ink from Cobra Ink Systems in my 1100As for that RIP you need. Ghost will certainly get you startedHere is the place to get the newest versions of GhostscriptAnd you will also need GSview, which you can get hereMost folks who think that they are getting nowhere with their Ghostscript installation and first use are a little confused that you will actually have no user interaction with Ghostscript. It merely runs in the background while you do all of your fiddling around in GSView.