I find this very confusing.
What do you mean by "media linierization"?
What do you mean by an "ink limit dot gain curve"?
TIC is a function of how an RGB to CMYK conversion is made. Not curves (plate or press).
thx, gordon p
People some times have a hard time understand that PS and ICC color management are much the same thing. Just like an ink jet media a press produces a different curve for each paper. So the plate is linerazed - printed to a media (paper) result is non linearized and read by densitometer/spectrophotometer- curve adjustments are made to plate setter - new curve printed - result read again until paper produces liner result with test.
During this process an ink limit is defined for each channel, it may be 86% DMAX and 2% MIN. 86 x 4 is 344 TIC When talking PS color management curves is a better term then profile this result will produce the color rendering dictionaries for the postscript interpretation process.
TIC is simply a term total ink limit, be it RGB to CMYK or CMYK to CMYK which is what PS color management was designed to work with ONLY!!
Is this stuff really a curve?
No, there is a LAB color model equivalent of the CMYK TIC 400 color model, PS CM systems assume this as the source space and for press purposes CMYK can be considered to be an absolute color space for the source.
The destination space is the space you created by the plate lineraization, ink limit process the TIC and curves also have through the software process a LAB color madel equivalent.
The plate making process simply connects the assumed color space with the descination color space via LAB.
Assume this, any ICC compliant application Adobe/Corel whatever, with a working CMYK of US web uncoated, anyone worth their salt knows this is a TIC 260 profile.
The designer uses a green C100 Y100 M5 K0, imports a CMYK image converted to the propper CMYK profile and produces a PDF for output, (if done correctly it will an uncolor managed PDF). As we read the green color all through the process it will read C100 Y100 M5 K0 and we all know the paper is not going to hold that ink however spot reading of the image show that its CMYK numbers are being passed along also.
Nothing in the ICC controlled process before the plate settter allows for the conversion to the plate destination color space for the non-images objects in the file.
The file is opened in lets say Super Trap and then trapped, then passed along to Signastation and imposed, still at all these points the CMYK numbers read just as they did in the native application.
From Signastation it is RIPPed VIA PS to the destination plate, asssumed source space to created destination space.
The display of the native application always tries to simulate what C100 Y100 M5 K0 looks like but no real change ever took place in the application to the green object, the image was already changed so the display (if calibrated) may be fine.
So the imaged passed through to the plate unchanged as the CMYK numbers were already in small destination space, the green objects was changed because most likely the paper was only going to hold less then the 100 for the C and Y channel. However the change was expected by the designer because their display had a simulation of a small destination color space.
I've never seen any plate for any CMYK job created in any other manner.