Re: High Resolution for Print
> {quote:title=russpears wrote:}{quote}
> but how can line art be output at 6-8 time the resolution of the image when the line screen is the same. Are you refering to in the RIP half tone dot creation resolution. Or are you saying that you can increase the line screen in a way that only affects vector line art not raster images.
>
> I know everyone has give me much to think about, but getting info like this puts me back a bit where I "thought" I started to understand. I really cannot tell where the confusion comes from. Once I understand that stocastc dots are higher resolutions (2400-3000 and up) and not the halfton dots themselves, I could see how I confused the two as the same as line screen that are around 150 to 175). But this answer suggest to me that you can increase the final quality of line art in print work apart from raster images?
>
> Again I will need to do more research into this before post more on this, but if I can be given a direction towards possiable areas of my confusion I will go there first.
You are confusing line screen and resolution. You can make an image @ 72 ppi and output it at any linescreen your platesetter is capable of. But your RIP is going to rasterize and screen that file at the resolution the device needs. Like 2400 dpi. The dots in the one-bit file will be 2400 dpi. There is no longer a pixel based image involved. It's just dots. Either white area or black dots. That's all that is in the file at imaging time. And it's the dots that are 2400 dpi. The lower your linescreen the bigger the dots will be. Higher line screen means the dots will be smaller (and appear smoother to the human eye).
> {quote:title=russpears wrote:}{quote}
> but how can line art be output at 6-8 time the resolution of the image when the line screen is the same. Are you refering to in the RIP half tone dot creation resolution. Or are you saying that you can increase the line screen in a way that only affects vector line art not raster images.
>
> I know everyone has give me much to think about, but getting info like this puts me back a bit where I "thought" I started to understand. I really cannot tell where the confusion comes from. Once I understand that stocastc dots are higher resolutions (2400-3000 and up) and not the halfton dots themselves, I could see how I confused the two as the same as line screen that are around 150 to 175). But this answer suggest to me that you can increase the final quality of line art in print work apart from raster images?
>
> Again I will need to do more research into this before post more on this, but if I can be given a direction towards possiable areas of my confusion I will go there first.
You are confusing line screen and resolution. You can make an image @ 72 ppi and output it at any linescreen your platesetter is capable of. But your RIP is going to rasterize and screen that file at the resolution the device needs. Like 2400 dpi. The dots in the one-bit file will be 2400 dpi. There is no longer a pixel based image involved. It's just dots. Either white area or black dots. That's all that is in the file at imaging time. And it's the dots that are 2400 dpi. The lower your linescreen the bigger the dots will be. Higher line screen means the dots will be smaller (and appear smoother to the human eye).