Ive recently learned my lesson about using rich black instead of 100% black for text on a white background because of registration issues.
But i now have to create a booklet design where the back cover is all black and therefore needs to be rich black. It has a small amount of white text on it, some of it quite fine.
How do i prevent the mis-registration from the background making my white text look terrible? Im using Illustrator CS3. Any tips?
It can be done, but it isn't easy. Try using a non-serif font (avoid light typefaces), and you have to trap the type to the background. The easiest way is to bring the Ai file into InDesign and use the trapping option there. The best way, of course, is to let the printer do it on the RIP if possible.
If you are doing this in InDesign you can use a stroke on the text set to 100%k 1-2%C (or yellow) And set the stroke to "screen" or "lighter color" viewing separations you will see that you have black only for as much as you have the width of the stroke.
It is also possible to do a "soft trap" if you need an extreme miss registration control by using "outer glow" on the text with the "glow" in 100% K and 1-2% C or Y. Strictly speaking you do not need the small % C or Y but some RIPs are se to overprint 100%K and the small % will not be seen but will force knockout on the other colours.
The method can be used on any dark image and not just for rich black. If you have it on a dark image you may want to set the blend mode to "normal" rather than "Screen" but it will make a slight sharpening effect/shadow if the image is too light.
Here's another shameless plug.
Since you are using Illustrator download and try for free this trapping plugin for Ai called PowerTrapper. - DeskPack Modules: Tools for Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop . If your white text is set to knockout on your rich black then the result of the trap should be to pullback on the CMY (you set the distance) and let the K alone to define the text outlines, that way with any colour plate shifting you have a good chance of not seeing any of the CMY in the white area.
"you never know how the past is going to turn out"
Rich black for fine text? How fine, serif or sans serif? Usually the trapping software should be able to pull back the CMY just enough. But it may end up pulling nearly all of it out depending on the trap width and the size/shape of the type.
I've used the 0/0/0/100 stroke method as well with excellent results but I duplicated my text layer and stroked the under-layer version so that the stroke wouldn't be drawn along the center of the text shapes (leaving half the stroke "inside" the letterforms). Be sure your stroke is trapping and not simply overprinting.
So the basic order of layers from bottom to top is: Rich black, stroked text, regular text, guides.
This trick works great if you have reasonably simple layouts but can get a bit tricky if you have a lot going on. So be cautious before you start building 100 layer documents =)
Good luck!
Edit: Did I read that wrong? Are you setting your type in rich black? Or white text on a rich black background?
Last edited by maynardsayswhat; 02-24-2011 at 11:29 AM.
"I'm gonna need to see more math I don't understand to believe all this"
Depending on the weight of your white type, we white frame all fine type on dark backgrounds .0007 which helps the pressroom, and do a .003 3/c holdback. The results are good and the pressroom can have a chance of holding register - even the webs.
one font is a thickish handwritten cursive type font and will be around 25pt if i recall correctly. But i still want it to be crisp white, so might need to trap this also? The other is Avante Gard sans serif in Light and will probably be 12pt and some in 10pt. I have absolutely no experience with trapping but have heard it mentioned before. Thanks for all the different methods. Ill give them a go. Im sure ill be back I dont really think i can rely on my printer much to help out on this one. He just shrugs or stares at me blankly most of the time when i ask him questions. Yeh i know, change printers!
one font is a thickish handwritten cursive type font and will be around 25pt if i recall correctly. But i still want it to be crisp white, so might need to trap this also? The other is Avante Gard sans serif in Light and will probably be 12pt and some in 10pt. I have absolutely no experience with trapping but have heard it mentioned before.
Some folks might say this --> rich blacks should not be used on black fields with knockouts, or on white text under 48 pt.
I would tend to agree with them folks. But thats not up for debate here.
when you create a rich black, you only want the edge of the black to define the edge of white type. There are many ways to do this, and while most professional designers might steer away from knocking out 12 point or 10 point typefaces of any sort, most professional prepress systems can trap this handily - we sell iTrap to our Compose Express RIP customers and also - recently - we also sell PaSharp.
To me, this is a RIP and trap issue - this is the responsibility of the same person involved with dot shape, line screen and screen angles - but I will set that argument aside for another day.
So - you have a few choices - you can use Illustrator and create three (3) layers - the bottom is that ricj black object - place on copy of the white type above that rich black object - then duplicate that layer again.
the TOP most layer will be your white type, normall - no strokes.
on the type between the top and the bottom - stroke the type with 100 percent black only...
about .125 (so you can see what is happening, use a MUCH smaller amount on you art!)
no need to convert to outlines and fuss with the strokes.
when you place the white type on top, it knocks out the INSIDE section of the stroke (the stroke grows inward and outward along the edge of the type) - this of course means the outside part of the stroke - which is 100% black ONLY - Knocks out the rich black.
I attached a simple picture of this and attached this to this post - the left shows the three objects - using light grey for the white (so you can see it) and the medium light blue for the stroke. the middle shows the stroked tupe placed, the right with the un-stroked type on top.
Note how the stroke is cut off in half on the far right
--- or you can invest in a trapping application.
If I were you, i would never ever knock out white type from ANYTHING but a normal balck for ANYTHING smaller than 18 point. PERIOD. You are asking for big trouble, and this is not a 'fire the printer" moment, it is 'tell the designer to understand this is a problem.
Hope this helps !
I would be happy to send you a PDF
Michael Jahn - Slightly used PDF Evangelist
Simi Valley California