Actually, I've seen offset on white plastic, printed same image both sides,
the reversed flopped, for for back-lit displays; the colors are richer. We see
this too with wide-format.
A press house is requesting wrong reading plates, so our prepress have been supplying them wrong reading 1 bit tiffs. Any valid reason why they would ask for that?
Hello Mazengh,
Enlightenment -- some PDFs
Regards, Alois
" From knowledge to competence is a great step ---- from ignorance to competence an
even greater one "
You remember correctly.From what I remember, the emulsion is usually "down," meaning that when you look at film right-reading, the surface facing you is the clear film and the back side is where the emulsion is. If you wanted to etch a clear mark in the film, you would do it on the emulsion side. The film is placed emulsion-down on the plate and the plate is exposed.
Correct with negative plates: if the emulsion is up, then it is not in contact with the plate and the black areas enlarge on the plate with hazy edges... thicker is the film between the emulsion and the plate, bigger is the enlargement.If the film were made emulsion-up (by mirroring the image), the light would spread a little bit through the clear film and create a bit of trapping. If you make two spot color plates that don't have screens, and the colors touch, and there is no trapping in the film image, you could make the lighter color emulsion-up to crudely create trapping.
An example... Some years ago, when I begun in offset printing, the print-shop had a little A4 offset press with only 2 cylinders: plate holding and pressure was done by only one cylinder twice bigger in diameter than the blanket cylinder...Kevin@Kodak said:Having said all that, I do not know what the actual printing benefits of direct litho are supposed to be - besides the elimination of the blanket.
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