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Erik said: "The testing was done without regards to standards or G7. Straight from characterization of the printers and the target Lab values of Pantone colours to the printer outputs."
Erik later said: "The authors are probably not aware of what they are saying. IMO what is said is that one can go from a colour target to the colour output, with a characteristic profile that maps the printing device, without any need for curves or G7."
The question of stability is more grist for further tests. I will discuss this further with the group. I think that there are tests along this line currently being undertaken by some Clemson students. I will find out more when I get settled in.
Exactly. All the rest of the discussion of consistency takes a back seat to the big point. For a printer who does multiple changeovers a day of largely spot color work, the savings are huge.
John, first I will say good luck with your new position at Clemson. Hope it works out well for you and your students.
Secondly, I have to say I am happy with the study. My comments about the authors not being aware of what they were doing was not to down grade the study. What the study showed as far as I am concerned is a positive example of a straight forward approach to matching colour. Often when I read technical papers, I find information that is helpful to how I view the process but was not something the authors were aware of.
Good luck with your testing of the EG printing method on flexo or offset. I think it will tend to highlight the fundamental problem of process inconsistency. There has been, for a long time, related results to the consistency of printing multiple inks instead of a spot colour. There is also a consensus on which method is more consistent. It is also done every day.
With CMYK one can consider the K as a spot colour. So the question is, is it more consistent to print a combination of CMY to get a black or gray or to print K as a solid or a screen. From general practice, some CMY is removed from an image and replaced with K and it is said that this approach is more consistent during a run.
So we get back to the old question about which needs to be done first. IMO it has always been that the processes first need to be made consistent and predictable before trying methods that greatly depend on process consistency. This seems to be generally understood in all other industries and with the development of any science. One can not develop science with technologies that are inconsistent.
I worked at Tetra Pak and in the mid 1980's, we ran a spot colour with CMYK EB Inks on five unit offset web presses. We were well aware of the potential benefit of running CMYK builds to replace some of the spot colours but knew the process was not consistent enough. I still think there is good potential but I also think the process needs to be designed to be more consistent. I suspect that your future test will show some problems with consistency.
I would also say that flexo and offset can be designed to be much more consistent. With offset, one will need to get rid of the ductor roller and with flexo, one will need to get rid of the anilox inker. The problem I see is that there is no will in the industry to actually face up to what I think are fundamental problems. This probably means that much of this effort with the Ryerson study and the coming press investigations, will go to waste if it shows that in the end, the results are not as hoped.
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