So would it be safe to say I would want to shoot for the same dot gains for uncoated as I did for coated? I arrived at a very decent gray for coated, so would I want the same dot gain for uncoated but with the lower SID's?
So with my coated plate curve I have, I am getting around an 18% dot gain at the 50%. I wouldn't want that same amount with uncoated?
Uncal Coated 50% screen reads 72 - so I cut back the 50% area on my curve by 4 so I would hit my 68 (18% gain)
Uncal Uncoated 50% screen reads 77 - so I would cut back the 50% area on my curve by 9 so I would hit 68 (18% gain)
Ahh. I think I understand. Thanks meddington. So how do I know what is a good dot gain to shoot for with uncoated and GRACoL? Is there not one for uncoated? Is the ISO 12647-2 curve a better way to go when talking about uncoated?
You just answered my question. Sorry I don't think I asked it very well. I know my curve will be different. But if 72% at the 50% screen is what I ended up with on coated, then 72% is what I would want on uncoated as well... even with lower SID's.
Uncal Coated 50% screen reads 72 - so I cut back the 50% area on my curve by 4 so I would hit my 68 (18% gain)
Uncal Uncoated 50% screen reads 77 - so I would cut back the 50% area on my curve by 9 so I would hit 68 (18% gain)
Keep in mind that TVI is a a value calculated from the solid density and the density of the particular percentage your measuring. Since with uncoated, your solid densities will be lower, your TVI will have to be higher in order to have the same tone at 50% as a coated print. One of the reasons that targeting TVI is a bit ambiguous.
Again, because the solids density is lower, doing the above would give you a lighter tone. A better method would have you matching tone response based on density rather than TVI, and determining which input dot value yeilds the density tone and adjusting from there.
Dot gain is NOT the issue. For the purposes of your question, there is no "good" or "bad" dot gain to shoot for.
You are shooting to align the final presswork tone values. I.e. for a 50% tone request in the original file you should achieve the same 72% on both coated and uncoated sheets. It basically does not matter what the dot gains are - as long as you achieve the desired tone on press.
Uncal Coated 50% screen reads 72 - so I cut back the 50% area on my curve by 4 so I would hit my 68 (18% gain)
Uncal Uncoated 50% screen reads 77 - so I would cut back the 50% area on my curve by 9 so I would hit 68 (18% gain)
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