Red_Right_Arm
Well-known member
We use Xante Symphony Flexo RIP 7.0. It has the ability to use ICC profiles, dot gain curves, and hybrid screening. It's basically the only thing we are using for color management. The people who were in charge before I was hired did not do a great job of creating a viable color management system. We currently only use three press profiles for seven presses. These profiles were created from one test back in 2011. On one substrate and one anilox. The ICC profile that is fed to the proofer is from one press, tested one time, on one substrate, with one anilox. So basically our proofer is making proofs that are being color corrected for only one printing scenario. That one ICC profile is creating the proofs that are used by all seven presses, regardless of what press settings/parameters they are actually using to run the job. I know. I know. There is work to be done.
So, it seems like there are dot gain adjustment curves and there are ICC profiles.
When we preflight a digital file, it goes from Illustrator, to the RIP, then to the proofer. The RIP handles all of what we can vaguely call color management. The RIP uses the one ICC profile to determine overprints, color densities, color adjustments, whatever you'd want from an ICC profile.
When the proof is approved, we send the same digital file we used for the proof. Only this time it goes to the RIP and gets deposited into one of three printing queues. These queues are basically presets that determine which dot gain curves to apply, which bearer bars, which control targets and registration marks. From there we set up our stepping and repeating and distortion from the RIP. The RIP generates the separated 1-bit TIFF files. Then those TIFF files go to the laser to image the plates.
So we have this RIP handling all of our color management. That's it. All of it. Everything passes through this one RIP. And this RIP is not best suited for the the different combinations of press settings/parameters that we'd need to control every possible press configuration. We're talking, like, 400+ possible combinations to have to keep under control. 400+ print queues, each with its own set of dot gain curves and such. 400+ ICC profiles to give to the proofer to predict what is supposed to happen on press.
Okay, anyway, so I'm trying to get all this under control. But I keep getting caught on the optimization, fingerprint, characterization steps for color management.
If we use the RIP to make a set of linear plates. Those plates will be used for the optimization trials.
Then we use the data we gathered from the optimization trials to make a set of fingerprint plates. But we will have made them before we've created any color management. No dot gain curves are made yet. No ICC profiles. These fingerprint samples are to be used as the standard for how the press should run. But we will not have them in color control yet at this point.
Then we make characterization plates. These plates have the IT8.7/4 characterization target. The IT8.7/4 characterization target is measured. ICC profiles are created. Dot gain curves are created. Now we have color management... sort of.
See, if you are supposed to use the fingerprint samples as THE standard for how the press should operate, but the fingerprint samples were created before color management, then once we start using color management won't it throw off all of the controls? Gray balance will be effected by the color management. Color adjustments will be effected by color management. Dot gains. Tint percentages. Ink densities. They'll all be effected by the color management. So how can the fingerprint be used as the standard, when we begin using color management AFTER the standard is created?
I've been told that whenever something changes we need to redo the optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles (all of which get stored into the RIP and used for proofs or 1-bit TIFFS for plates). These new color management files will be different again. Which will mean another round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles. Now something has changed again. So it requires another round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles. It's like a hamster on a wheel that never stops.
So, when does it stop? When are we done doing these tests? We can't endlessly keep doing round after round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests.
So, it seems like there are dot gain adjustment curves and there are ICC profiles.
When we preflight a digital file, it goes from Illustrator, to the RIP, then to the proofer. The RIP handles all of what we can vaguely call color management. The RIP uses the one ICC profile to determine overprints, color densities, color adjustments, whatever you'd want from an ICC profile.
When the proof is approved, we send the same digital file we used for the proof. Only this time it goes to the RIP and gets deposited into one of three printing queues. These queues are basically presets that determine which dot gain curves to apply, which bearer bars, which control targets and registration marks. From there we set up our stepping and repeating and distortion from the RIP. The RIP generates the separated 1-bit TIFF files. Then those TIFF files go to the laser to image the plates.
So we have this RIP handling all of our color management. That's it. All of it. Everything passes through this one RIP. And this RIP is not best suited for the the different combinations of press settings/parameters that we'd need to control every possible press configuration. We're talking, like, 400+ possible combinations to have to keep under control. 400+ print queues, each with its own set of dot gain curves and such. 400+ ICC profiles to give to the proofer to predict what is supposed to happen on press.
Okay, anyway, so I'm trying to get all this under control. But I keep getting caught on the optimization, fingerprint, characterization steps for color management.
If we use the RIP to make a set of linear plates. Those plates will be used for the optimization trials.
Then we use the data we gathered from the optimization trials to make a set of fingerprint plates. But we will have made them before we've created any color management. No dot gain curves are made yet. No ICC profiles. These fingerprint samples are to be used as the standard for how the press should run. But we will not have them in color control yet at this point.
Then we make characterization plates. These plates have the IT8.7/4 characterization target. The IT8.7/4 characterization target is measured. ICC profiles are created. Dot gain curves are created. Now we have color management... sort of.
See, if you are supposed to use the fingerprint samples as THE standard for how the press should operate, but the fingerprint samples were created before color management, then once we start using color management won't it throw off all of the controls? Gray balance will be effected by the color management. Color adjustments will be effected by color management. Dot gains. Tint percentages. Ink densities. They'll all be effected by the color management. So how can the fingerprint be used as the standard, when we begin using color management AFTER the standard is created?
I've been told that whenever something changes we need to redo the optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles (all of which get stored into the RIP and used for proofs or 1-bit TIFFS for plates). These new color management files will be different again. Which will mean another round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles. Now something has changed again. So it requires another round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests. Which will produce another set of dot gain curves and another set of ICC profiles. It's like a hamster on a wheel that never stops.
So, when does it stop? When are we done doing these tests? We can't endlessly keep doing round after round of optimization, fingerprint, and characterization tests.