David Milisock
Well-known member
On the other hand...I've not been to a shop yet that's using Postscript color management to drive their platesetter. Frankly, I thought PS color management died a long time ago and was effectively replaced by tagged PDF workflows. Different strokes I guess.
"...through a series of calibrations and internal software prosesses [sic]..." ?
Sounds good....but doesn't give me much to go on.
And, yes, I have an ICC mindset....it's my job.
I guess at this point we're just talking past each other David......but I would like to hear the answer to a question that's been asked of you a couple of times without an answer that I'm aware of: when you say "linearize a press", do you mean an original 50% value in the file prints and measures as a 50% dot on paper? I would really like to get a direct answer to that question....a 50% dot printing as 50% on paper is an interesting concept that I would like to hear more about.
Terry
It's more complicated than that. Yes you create a test plate and yes you print the plate and adjust the software for what the 50% on the plate reads on the paper. However through this process the software also has had entered into it ink limts for each color as well as the curve for each test swatch. One product required that a test be done util the final destination on paper did equal not just 50% bu matvh as many of the swatchedas posible. This was uses as below.
This creates the color space of the press. The RIP/setter uses a theoritical CMYK 100 per channel LAB equal as the soruce to convert to the created CMYK for the presses LAB equal as destination. PS CM easy and simple.
Now if your process does notinterject itseld in the RIP/Setterprocess then it's just PS CM midified ith an ICC profile.