Re: Riddle Me This--No trapping
Here's my 3 cents.
Many printers do not use in-rip traping even if their rip has such a module, usually it isn't licensed!
Because we are doing folding carton work almost exclusively, using metallic inks, duotones and tritones, multiple varnishes (or fake ones - ask me about this some day), foiling and embossing and 95% of the client files we receive are simply wrong and I mean totally wrong in many cases, we work in native files, repair builds, recolor as needbe, do application level trapping and use a rudimentry ps eps workflow. You may think we're nuts, but every single in-rip trapper that we have tried, chokes on these sorts of files. They trap instantly but while some objects trap properly, some blends trap properly; others in a different area of the same file will trap incorrectly. Change the parameters of the in-rip trapper and the areas that were wrong are now correct while the areas that were correct are now wrong. Sure, it takes us a bit longer and we require a large skillset, but our results are foolproof (based on operator knowledge). Biggest flaws of in-rip trapping is the inability of most to efficiently edit the traps afterwards. Plus vector trap is simply not good enough IMO; I much preferred the old hires raster trappers such as Contex RipnStrip, LW/CT where you could simply edit the LW after trapping ordering the traps based upon objects in the LW file then make the composite CT from the LWTrp file. On a SGI R5000 or 10000 processor (circa 1988) small tab size pages would be trapped in <2 minutes and the Comp CT made in about 4 minutes. We used to handle 27 vers of each page (9 Cdn zones w 3 languages vers) and complete a full 24 pg flyer in less than one day shift week with two operators. Spot colors were just more cmyk (up to twelve colors). Remember this was 1988!
I am also a strong believer in flattening early, not late; never late because once flattened, transparency cannot hurt you. I have seen too many type shadow effects ruined, mostly because of poor designer method (layering priority problems). Since we are the printer's prepress, we assume the file is correct for intent when it arrives. If it isn't, we charge to do the thing over again so late editing (sold to us as a flattening early prob) is no issue.
I suppose one could argue that direct to press (such as iGen or Indigo) especially where the stock travels flat through the device and ink jet sprays the image, then trapping is perhaps not necessary at all because fit is perfect. Hey, there's a selling feature, no ugly trap lines!
Key to the whole trapping thing is to openly communicate and trust; ah, there in lies the problem of the whole freggin world; no simply decency, no trust, closed lips because of ignorance or pride or, . . . well you get my rant.
John W
Edited by: John Willis on Aug 1, 2008 8:32 AM