Red_Right_Arm
Well-known member
I run a prepress department and have been getting a lot of backlash for inaccurate plates lately. It seems to me that there is a disconnect between three upper managers and myself as to what is the correct way to create accurate plates for press. The three upper managers come from 35 years of experience printing in flexo. They come from a time before computers, RIPs, or digital ∆E measurements. All they know of flexo printing is that you have absolutely no idea how a job will run until you get the plates on press and begin seeing what is coming out at the end. From there you evaluate the results and decide if you want to change your anilox, impression, ink density, or line screen on the plates. But until you start printing that live job everything is an unknown and it is the pressmen's job to monkey with the press until it starts to look correct. And so I will describe two scenarios below. I'd love to know A) If I'm wrong, and if so where do I go astray. B) If I am correct, how have people overcome this in other companies.
Scenario 1 (The throw everything at it and see what sticks approach)
- Digital proof is approved.
- A "color accurate proof" is printed. This proof runs through one set of color management that is the same for all substrates on all presses.
- The digital file is sent to the RIP.
- The RIP has one generic dot gain curve that is meant to be good enough for most substrates on most jobs.
- The plates are made using this curve.
- The plates go on press and begins producing labels to be evaluated.
- Based on the labels coming off the press, the pressman will change anilox rolls, ink densities, impression settings, and even different line screens on the plates.
- Once the various adjustments are made the pressman evaluates if they are making the labels look better or worse compared to the proof.
- After some combination works, the labels are measured to be within 2.0 ∆E of the proof or the Pantone book, depending on the colors.
- Prepress's job is to instinctively tweak the dot gain curve in order to anticipate the issues they are going to have on press.
- At times Prepress ought to know to make a variety of plates at a variety of line screens with a variety of dot gain curve adjustments so that the pressmen have options to try out as they are setting up the job.
- Color management can't possibly work for what we do because there is no way to know ahead of time which anilox, density, line screen, or impression will work to produce this job correctly.
Scenario 2 (The one I keep saying we should be using)
- Fingerprint all the presses on our most popular substrate, which should get us 80% of the way there.
- Create different generic profiles for each press based on these fingerprints.
- Decide which anilox to use first. Adjusting it is a last resort, not a first move.
- Keep consistent ink densities. Adjusting it in a controlled way is a last resort, not a first move.
- Decide which line screen to use on the plates first. Adjusting it is a last resort, not a first move.
- The pressman can play with the impression to see if it makes things better or worse, but that's about it.
- Allot time into the workflow for measurements and adjustments and a new set of plates.
- After taking measurements from the produced labels, the dot gain curve is duplicated and that's the one that gets tweaked for this specific job. The tweaks are based on the dot gain measurements coming off the press for this configuration.
- The adjusted plates are made and should run more accurately on press this time.
- If not, changing the anilox, ink density, or plate line screen still shouldn't be done.
- Measurements are taken, the plate is adjusted farther, and a new set of plates made.
- Repeat as many times as needed until new plates resolve the issue.
- If new plates aren't helping, then start messing with the anilox, densities, impression, or line screen.
- It means that every new job will need a new set of adjusted plates at first. But until we decide to do extensive fingerprinting for each variable on each press this is as good as it'll get.
Scenario 1 (The throw everything at it and see what sticks approach)
- Digital proof is approved.
- A "color accurate proof" is printed. This proof runs through one set of color management that is the same for all substrates on all presses.
- The digital file is sent to the RIP.
- The RIP has one generic dot gain curve that is meant to be good enough for most substrates on most jobs.
- The plates are made using this curve.
- The plates go on press and begins producing labels to be evaluated.
- Based on the labels coming off the press, the pressman will change anilox rolls, ink densities, impression settings, and even different line screens on the plates.
- Once the various adjustments are made the pressman evaluates if they are making the labels look better or worse compared to the proof.
- After some combination works, the labels are measured to be within 2.0 ∆E of the proof or the Pantone book, depending on the colors.
- Prepress's job is to instinctively tweak the dot gain curve in order to anticipate the issues they are going to have on press.
- At times Prepress ought to know to make a variety of plates at a variety of line screens with a variety of dot gain curve adjustments so that the pressmen have options to try out as they are setting up the job.
- Color management can't possibly work for what we do because there is no way to know ahead of time which anilox, density, line screen, or impression will work to produce this job correctly.
Scenario 2 (The one I keep saying we should be using)
- Fingerprint all the presses on our most popular substrate, which should get us 80% of the way there.
- Create different generic profiles for each press based on these fingerprints.
- Decide which anilox to use first. Adjusting it is a last resort, not a first move.
- Keep consistent ink densities. Adjusting it in a controlled way is a last resort, not a first move.
- Decide which line screen to use on the plates first. Adjusting it is a last resort, not a first move.
- The pressman can play with the impression to see if it makes things better or worse, but that's about it.
- Allot time into the workflow for measurements and adjustments and a new set of plates.
- After taking measurements from the produced labels, the dot gain curve is duplicated and that's the one that gets tweaked for this specific job. The tweaks are based on the dot gain measurements coming off the press for this configuration.
- The adjusted plates are made and should run more accurately on press this time.
- If not, changing the anilox, ink density, or plate line screen still shouldn't be done.
- Measurements are taken, the plate is adjusted farther, and a new set of plates made.
- Repeat as many times as needed until new plates resolve the issue.
- If new plates aren't helping, then start messing with the anilox, densities, impression, or line screen.
- It means that every new job will need a new set of adjusted plates at first. But until we decide to do extensive fingerprinting for each variable on each press this is as good as it'll get.
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