chevalier
Well-known member
This is a long read but the details are important.
For most of you moiré this hasn't been a problem since CtF came around. CtP pretty much completely eliminated the problem in commercial litho. In the packaging world this is still a headache and problem. As I came in into the wonderful world of prepress with CtF and very minor film and pasteup shooting (ITEK for duplicators and ancient repeat stuff that didn't have digital files) moiré is not something I have much experience and wisdom with.
I made the jump from commercial litho to packaging over a year ago and now feel that I have a full grasp on the minor differences between the two (personally I don't think it's really much more complicated than pocket folders). The one thing that is massively different between the two niches is the utilization of spot colors. I now work with jobs that are up to 8 inks and many times every ink is a spot color. Sometimes 6+ colors are intersecting with halftone screens. The Heidelberg Prinect workflow I have is somewhat deficient with spot color angle control as it is really designed around commercial litho and patched to work with packaging.
I am limited to 4 angles and 2400DPI/175LPI. I use an elliptical dot. It would be nice to be able to screen some colors at a higher LPI as this prevents/hides moiré. My current angles are Cyan-165º, Magenta-45º, Yellow-0º, Black-105º. I have the option to shift all angles 7.5º, or leave CMK angles alone and move Yellow to 30º or 60º. I can also utilize document controlled screening but I am unaware of any way to set these angles manually. Most of my files are natives handled in Illustrator. I also get PDFs sometimes fully prepped and trapped to my specifications sometimes not. The PDFs generated are then color/converted and trapped (if needed) in PrinectP, imposed with Signa StationP and RIPed with MetaDimension.
I have a Fuji FinalProof halftone-dot proofer but it is rather useless for predicting/preventing moiré as it simulates spot inks with multiple donors at a higher DPI/LPI. I have used it with wrong-color direct donors but when you are attempting to see something that is a visual problem this doesn't help you much. Not to mention the cost!
My current method: When I process a potential problem job I build a spreadsheet listing each ink then listing whether it has screens. If it has screens I then list each screened ink the screens intersects with. I then very thoughtfully start assigning angles and create a brand-specific workflow in my RIP with manually set angles for each ink. I do not use the yellow angle unless the ink is yellow as I learned the hard way the yellow angle LOVES to moiré.
Problems:
Any suggestions, comments, and criticisms are welcome. I am leaning towards pushing for a workflow that is designed around packaging.
For most of you moiré this hasn't been a problem since CtF came around. CtP pretty much completely eliminated the problem in commercial litho. In the packaging world this is still a headache and problem. As I came in into the wonderful world of prepress with CtF and very minor film and pasteup shooting (ITEK for duplicators and ancient repeat stuff that didn't have digital files) moiré is not something I have much experience and wisdom with.
I made the jump from commercial litho to packaging over a year ago and now feel that I have a full grasp on the minor differences between the two (personally I don't think it's really much more complicated than pocket folders). The one thing that is massively different between the two niches is the utilization of spot colors. I now work with jobs that are up to 8 inks and many times every ink is a spot color. Sometimes 6+ colors are intersecting with halftone screens. The Heidelberg Prinect workflow I have is somewhat deficient with spot color angle control as it is really designed around commercial litho and patched to work with packaging.
I am limited to 4 angles and 2400DPI/175LPI. I use an elliptical dot. It would be nice to be able to screen some colors at a higher LPI as this prevents/hides moiré. My current angles are Cyan-165º, Magenta-45º, Yellow-0º, Black-105º. I have the option to shift all angles 7.5º, or leave CMK angles alone and move Yellow to 30º or 60º. I can also utilize document controlled screening but I am unaware of any way to set these angles manually. Most of my files are natives handled in Illustrator. I also get PDFs sometimes fully prepped and trapped to my specifications sometimes not. The PDFs generated are then color/converted and trapped (if needed) in PrinectP, imposed with Signa StationP and RIPed with MetaDimension.
I have a Fuji FinalProof halftone-dot proofer but it is rather useless for predicting/preventing moiré as it simulates spot inks with multiple donors at a higher DPI/LPI. I have used it with wrong-color direct donors but when you are attempting to see something that is a visual problem this doesn't help you much. Not to mention the cost!
My current method: When I process a potential problem job I build a spreadsheet listing each ink then listing whether it has screens. If it has screens I then list each screened ink the screens intersects with. I then very thoughtfully start assigning angles and create a brand-specific workflow in my RIP with manually set angles for each ink. I do not use the yellow angle unless the ink is yellow as I learned the hard way the yellow angle LOVES to moiré.
Problems:
- No way that I am aware of to accurately proof moiré short going to plate and press or films. Am I wrong?
- No way to predict moiré other than intuition.
- When a brand introduces a new design or new colors the whole custom angle assignment workflow is shot.
- When a brand uses multiple designs sometimes multiple workflows are needed.
- Getting imposition operator and RIP operator to remember to use the right brand specific workflows as the number is exponentially growing.
Any suggestions, comments, and criticisms are welcome. I am leaning towards pushing for a workflow that is designed around packaging.
Last edited: