AlexRossi76
Active member
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Usually printers like to trap their own files, especially in packaging.
I would suggest you look at better service elsewhere as these days it is/should be all about service you receive from your print provider.
That being said, this is trapping they are asking you to do.
If your white text is laid on top of rich black background, in case of slight misregistration on press that will happen, trust me, one or more colours will show up in white text area and caused text to "plug up" and/or become ineligible if small enough.
To prevent this from happening, you need to stroke text with darkest colour, usually black.
What this is going to do is in case of misregistration, other colours will move slightly under the black but will not show in white and your white text will stay white.
On our rips, we have automatic setting that does this and "pulls" back other colours under the white during trapping function.
I hope this helps.
You would need to knock it out, otherwise if it's set to overprint, it will let other colours underneath.
It's hard to explain without showing you in real world, but imagine there has to be white, than black only stroke, than rest of the colours with black.
Could I just ask quickly though. If the black was set to a spot colour black, there would be no reason to trap the text right?
Hi Gordo,
Thanks for your reply and images you supplied.
So would I have to stroke the white text with a CMY breakdown only to knock out only in order for this to work?
File attached for reference as a ZIP with .ai file and PDF attached
if I've done this wrong, is there any chance you could set it up on the illustrator file correctly so i can see how it needs to be set up?
Thanks for that Gordo, that really is a good help!!
Just say tho, for some reason the background colour was a red made up of C=15 M=100 Y=90 K=10 and the text above it was still white.
How would you trap something of a different background colour like a 4 colour process red? I presume what has been sent over wouldn't work?
Just say tho, for some reason the background colour was a red made up of C=15 M=100 Y=90 K=10 and the text above it was still white.
How would you trap something of a different background colour like a 4 colour process red? I presume what has been sent over wouldn't work?
Then you can't do a spreadback as the result would be a halo around your letters. You have to start thinking about a design that uses a black stroke around the reverse type, or you just live with the misregister.
This is why keylines were developed around images.
so if I was to use a black keyline around the text, would a 0.2mm stroke from the outside of the text be sufficient enough to avoid mis-registeration?
That depends on the press, the substrate, the sheet/web size et cetera. You'll have to ask the printer about his process.
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