Red_Right_Arm
Well-known member
Hey, everyone. So it took a while to figure out why my spectrophotometer wasn't giving me accurate dot area readings for process colors. It resulted in having dot gain curves that were pulling the colors way too far back and causing light prints. But I got through that challenge and had it explained to me why a 50% dot patch will read back as 68% on the spectrophotometer and that's what I want.
now I'm wondering how people go about checking their dot area coverage on spot colors? For example, if I am using 485 red at 50%. And that is gaining on press to be a 60% sized dot, the spectrophotometer will tell me that the dot area coverage is 75%. Far too much, so says the spectro. But I need to know for sure that the dots of this spot color are actually gaining to 65%. I need to know that when I make my dot gain curves that measuring a dot and getting a reading of 50% really means that it is indeed gaining and balancing out to 50% after my adjustment. But with the spectrophotometer giving me these heavier readings, I don't feel like I can ever know what I need to verify using this tool in this way.
So what do you all do with spot color screens?
now I'm wondering how people go about checking their dot area coverage on spot colors? For example, if I am using 485 red at 50%. And that is gaining on press to be a 60% sized dot, the spectrophotometer will tell me that the dot area coverage is 75%. Far too much, so says the spectro. But I need to know for sure that the dots of this spot color are actually gaining to 65%. I need to know that when I make my dot gain curves that measuring a dot and getting a reading of 50% really means that it is indeed gaining and balancing out to 50% after my adjustment. But with the spectrophotometer giving me these heavier readings, I don't feel like I can ever know what I need to verify using this tool in this way.
So what do you all do with spot color screens?