SteveSuffRIT;n288912
ISO 12647 expects 16% TVI @ 50% with 175lpi AM screening.[/QUOTE said:
I believe that’s based on linear film where with a positive film workflow that 50% on film will be about 48% on plate and with a negative film workflow that 50% on film will be about 52% on plate. ISO turning a process control metric into a target
16% increase is the "ideal" increase for the condition sheetfed offset coated with the "newer" profiles based on FOGRA 51 for CMY
K (the former FOGRA 39 based profiles expect an increase of 14,3 for CMY and 17% for K)
Dot gain or dot loss is therefore used as a process control metric (expected tone vs actual). It is incorrectly and unproductively defined as a target by the ISO folks
i argue in a very strong way that i did not get right what Gordo wanted to say with that, but i am absolutely sure that the peace or war status between the prepress- and print-section in a company (and after that between seller and customer) depends more from getting "ideal" increases (very espacially when cmyk-separated "black and white"-photography is to print...) than from "ideal" ink density to reach the "ideal" Lab-values in the solids, (they are depending in all cases from the stock paper white point, which often is to different from the white point in a used profile. Based on this reason they had developed FOGRA39 up to FOGRA51 to respect more that in real live there are so much papers whith OBAs that FOGRA39 is hardly or not to serve with judged in a strong way...)
IMHO the value of the ideal ink density is those, which leads as near as possible to the "ideal" increase. (in any case the increase do not care about a white point of the different stock papers in a way the solids did, so you can work reliable with...) ;-)
And of course it is not only distortion that causes increase, more important is light catching, isn´t it?
Best
Ulrich