EFI RIP and G7 Certification
EFI RIP and G7 Certification
Hi Levy,
Let me try to answer your original question, then move on to this one. First, as Glenn has pointed out, there is currently no specification for individual user proofs in North America as there is in Europe. The default tolerances you see in EFI's Color Verifier come from Fogra. EFI may be an American company, but its proofing products are 100% engineered in Germany, where that division is also administered. Thus those tolerances you see. Here in N.A. IDEAlliance has established specifications for systems, not user proofs. A certified system must be composed of all the same components as present in the system submitted for certification: Same printer, ink, paper, RIP, reference and output profiles. Possession of such a system does not assure that good proofs will result but rather that one may at least assume that good proofs are possible. It is equally true that other systems, for example using other proofing papers and custom profiles, may perform as well as or better than an exact clone of the system described in the official ADS on file with IDEAlliance. Another wrinkle is that the standards (GRACoL, SWOP) may not relate closely to the actual press conditions you are trying to simulate in your proofs. An accurate SWOP proof may not be good enough if, for example, the press substrate is of a different color than specified in SWOP3 or SWOP5.
It is true that dE76 is the metric used throughout GRACoL and SWOP system certification. This should not concern you as a maker of production proofs. I recommend paying close attention to dH on the 3-color gray patches, as this is a good measure of gray balance. I would look for a dH of .5 or better on these patches. I feel the default tolerances in Color Verifier are reasonable, roughly twice as wide as specified for system certification. You can of course change them if you like. Again, bear in mind that there are as yet no official tolerances for individual proofs in North America.
I do not personally feel that dH on primaries is a consistently useful metric for inkjet proofs, as these "solids" are merely simulated and an error there does not tell you, as it does on a laminate proof or press, for example, that there is an ink/colorant problem. I have also occasionally seen a proof with excellent gray balance and contrast that exceeds 2.5 dH on, for example, a yellow solid, an error that is very difficult to see. (In this regard I actually prefer dE, as it also measures the much more visible lightness error.) What's more, pure primary solids are statistically rare in a print job--except in the color bars, of course. This is a problem with standards in general: They tend to test system capability rather than actual individual proof appearance. EFI's new Dynamic Wedge is an interesting development in this regard. It samples the predominant colors in the job and puts them in the color bar, where they can be verified with the same user-adjustable standards as can the standard wedges. It also contains all the spot colors present. This is not part of any official verification regime and likely never will be, but it can be highly relevant to the usefulness of a particular proof.
The entire matter of establishing meaningful proof standards is very much under discussion at IDEAlliance at the moment, and some if its participants are your correspondents in this very thread. Stay tuned.
As for "Selective Correction" in the RIP, I'm unsure what feature you're referring to. Colorproof XF has a relinearization tool, an L*a*b* optimization for tightening the proof-reference match, and a profile white point editor, which can help you match your proof to a "nonstandard" proof substrate color, which in reality is pretty much all press substrates.
Please feel free to contact me for further information on proofing in general and EFI Colorproof in particular.
Best regards,
Mike Strickler
Certified Implementer, EFI Proofing Products
IDEAlliance G7 Expert
MSP Graphic Services
MSP Graphic Services: Prepress and Color Management
707.664.1628
Meddington,
Thank you for the thorough explanation. Are you familiar with the EFI Rip in general? where would I be able to use the 'selective correction feature'? Is this something that I have to request to them (EFI). How would I be able to use profile editor? will this produce a profile that I can use with EFI Rip as well?
- Levy