meddington
Well-known member
Now, why am I saying proofing papers should be free of OBAs, as some people say, hey I have it in my press stock too, so it should be the same. The reason is, it never behaves the same,
"Never" might be a bit presumptuous. Moderate amounts of brighteners between papers *can* behave similarly, and *possibly* yield a closer visual result than having one paper OBA free. A good argument for OBA free is that it is not excited by differing amounts of UV in the lighting conditions. This usually doesn't hold true for the press stock though, which almost invariably contains OBAs. Suffice to say that its possible to find a proof paper with moderate amounts of OBAs that work well in a particular lighting condition with a particular press stock.
and most users, at least in commercial printing, will not put their spectrophotometer on printed stock any more. Why should they? To do what? Fingerprint a press?
This is as much visual as measurable, but how about to more closely align the proofing simulation to the actual press substrate?
We finally have printing standards in the market and people have come to grabs with them. In Europe, the universal language is ISOcoated V2, and this is what most of the proofs relate to. So as long as I have set up my proofing system to be able to print the different color spaces and paper categories, and all Rip vendors supply these profiles for their systems, there is no reason to create your own profiles,
I'm certainly all for standardized printing and proofing, but I do find it beneficial, and often necessary to augment the white point of the proof to match the final press substrate. Differences in paper shade can have a significant effect in highlight tones and affect visual perception. For example, if I provide proofs toward SWOPcoated3, which has essentially a white point of a*=0, b*=0, but the press stock measures a*=0, b*-5, there's likely going to be a visual difference that can lead to issues on press.
but you need to recalibrate your system every once in a while, and there you measure on the proofing paper, and OBAs will get in the way and throw off your measurements. The other factor is that inkjet proofs on paper containing OBAs will rapidly degrade, and this is very well an absolute no no, for instance in catalog production which may last a few weeks. This is also the reason Fogra will only certify papers with no or very little OBAs, as others will fail the aging test.
"Rapidly" can be a relative term. I've got proof samples on paper with a fair amount of OBAs (b*=-5) from few months to several years back that measure identically (for all practical purposes) as they did when they were first produced. Of course I agree that OBAs can degrade, but how proofs are stored can make a difference.
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