The problem with G7 is that it was designed to address a specific purpose.
That purpose was that prior to computer-to-plate, while it was possible in litho printing to determine individual primary color values; individual primary color densities; media white point and total-of-all-primaries ink density, what it was not possible to determine with accuracy was dot gain -- now of course referred to by the more scientific-sounding Tone Value Increase.
CTP made it possible to do that, and that's very basically what the G7 methodology does.
So the idea was then that if you could determine tone curves as well as the above-mentioned variables, you could have all the elements of a machine-state in one handy portable, universal, stock profile; so you could then use that stock profile and get matching results whether you were printing in New York or Shanghai.
And to that extent it does work...
I'd say the downside is that all these printers who struggled hard and put all this effort into making their product a commodity shouldn't be surprised when their clients start wanting commodity pricing.
The original idea again is that if you have all machine-state variables defined and articulated as standards except dot gain (TVI), then you can adjust dot gain (TVI)on a press to match a standard, use that standard as the expected tone curves in a stock profile, and print to that profile universally and get consistent results between presses.
Defining tone curves -- whether called linearization or calibration -- has been part of the process since day one.
We do use ICC profiling for our presses. Can the two work together?
Is there pros and cons to doing this?
Would using both give my operators a bigger window of control around color control and variance?
We do keep our presses in good running shape. TVI is consistent, not perfect numbers but consistent.
Linearization and calibration do not mean the same thing. But people (vendors and printers) often get these terms confused or misuse them.
We do use ICC profiling for our presses. Can the two work together?
Well, yes and no.
They can... But it's pointless to do. The whole, entire, original point of G7 was to make a tone curve for standardized printing conditions that worked with standardized profiles, thereby precluding the need for individual profiles.
If you're profiling, you can run the G7 routine as your linearization/calibration routine, but once you make an ICC profile, it's irrelevant, and your end result is no longer originally-described G7. Any other properly run routine will accomplish the same result. It's the ICC profile that tells the RIP what dots to create. Whatever calibration routine you use is simply part of the machine-state described to it.
Correct Color
Correct me if I’m wrong but I always thought that linearization is simply no curve at all, and calibration is a curve that’s applied to achieve a given target?
I.e., A linearized set of plates is used to determine the amount of calibration needed.
As many have stated, custom ICC profiles work the best. IMO the real issue is how to make a custom ICC profile in the easiest way possible.
Okay, I'll get out my soapbox here and say I completely disagree.
Profiling is an art. It can't be learned in a webinar, or at a three day "boot camp."
What I wish, is that the industry would recognize this.
Mike
Correct me if I’m wrong but I always thought that linearization is simply no curve at all, and calibration is a curve that’s applied to achieve a given target?
I.e., A linearized set of plates is used to determine the amount of calibration needed.
Hello Erik and Festive Greetings to all.
Where do these " Magicians " reside that have slain the 150+ variable inputs that need to be mastered and understood............ in the
Lithographic Printing Process?
Regards, Alois
All a pressman's skill is for naught if the customer buying the printing thinks the quality you get from the "button pressing" level of running the press is good enough.
A related misconception is that offset presses are designed to print color.
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