Hi Gordo
I would value your opinion on my statement earlier in this post...
We are currently printing to Fogra 45 standards which means a 40% CMY patch on the artwork should measure 56% (16% Dot Gain) on the printed sheet and a 80% CMY patch on the artwork should measure 91% (11% Dot Gain) on the printed sheet.
The reason I ask this is I had a visit from a "Colour Expert" and he said that a 40% patch on the artwork should print as 40% on the printed sheet. I see this as printing "linear" and not to any standard (ie Fogra) and have you ever experienced anyone that prints to a linear state
or is my understanding of dot gain incorrect?
Many Thanks.
I have never met a printer that prints a linear press sheet - i.e. 50% in the file measures 50% on the press sheet. To do so would make the presswork look low in contrast and washed out. You can certainly print that way if you choose to do so, however, you would be printing to your own shop standard rather than an industry standard.
According to the standard, Fogra 45 is for type 3 offset light weight coated papers using 150 lpi AM/XM screening.
The K is Curve C: 19% dot gain @40% (59% final tone) and 12.3% @80% (92.3% final tone)
The CMY is Curve B: 16% dot gain @ 40% (56% final tone) and 11.5% @80% (91.5% final tone)
However...
These dot gain curves named C and B are not contained in the ISO profiles or the Fogra published characterization data. Those files only hold D50 2° colorimetric data. The CMYK target print curves published by ISO are strictly valid ONLY for the ISO inks actually used by ISO for their test prints based on plates imaged in a linear film workflow. For a 40% Cyan the goal is not to match the ISO specified apparent dot gain, but the ISO specified 50% Cyan C.I.E. Lab D50 2° color, by using a different dot gain if necessary.
Now comes the confusing part....and the part that I don't fully understand....
Because these specifications are based on a linear film workflow, there are multiple dot gain curves represented in ISO 12647 which are presumably represented in the various ICC profiles derived from the characterization data that resulted in those press runs. It appears that, because the specifications state that "direct analogies to film production systems are maintained" the intent is to use these curves as the reproduction targets.
This means that there is no cross print condition standard and that some types of printing (20 micron FM curve F) cannot be done because the dot gains would be too high.
So the proofs for all these printing conditions would look different and so would the presswork.
To, me, the idea of having different tone reproduction curve targets for presswork for different processes or different halftone line screens is counterproductive to standardization.
best, gordo
PS I do not claim to be an expert. I'm always happy to be shown when I am wrong. Your color expert should have had a business discussion with you about presswork standards and why they should, or should not, be followed in your particular case.