Digital Printing Process Design Q & A II

9 , Q: How to get the best grayscale effect from a digital press?

A: Please use a light black tone, but note: Unless you want a very light gray shadow, do not use less than 10% light gray. Starting from 20% light gray, it rose to about 80% gray. Avoid large gray areas (greater than a few inches) in a single gray shade.

10. Q. Should I trap the colors in the file?

A: First consult the printing company and obtain their suggestions. To accurately describe the colors used, it is best to provide proofs to the printing company. The work of each digital press is different. Some printers, such as NexPress, can automatically trap files. Some printers cannot do trapping. Follow the printer's instructions. If trapping is important to you, do some experiments in advance.


11, Q: How to deal with trapping?

A: The problem of leaking is usually caused by overprinting of the printing press. Since digital presses have tightly controlled overprinting, there is no need to deal with the gap between the two colors.

12, Q: How to set up a bleeding page?

A: Ask the printing factory whether its press has special bleeding requirements. Some print jobs, such as those requiring die cutting, require larger bleeding edges. Bleeding is usually set up according to the offset process, and there are no problems. When submitting to India, you should report the bleeding setting you made.

13Q: Can I use any desired font?

A: There are many kinds of fonts, especially on the Internet, which are not supported by digital presses, imagesetters or CTP devices. To avoid font problems, stick with fonts in Adobe Type 1 and TrueType instead of using the Multiple Master font font.

14, Q: What does it mean if the printer proposes to use the correct font?

A: There are a variety of fonts in the font - bold, italic, bold and italic, civilian body, reduced body and small cover. Not every possible glyph is contained in a special font or purchased font.

In order for the text input to display correctly, you need to specify the appropriate glyphs from the font list. Unfortunately, when using bold or italics, or selecting those glyphs from the menu, the software does not automatically select the correct glyphs for you. Because this requires judgment. Instead, the software will bold or tilt the normal glyphs, which can cause problems in any imaging process.

15. Q: The photos in India appear to be rough, but that is not what you want to see. What's wrong?

A: The first thing to suspect is that the resolution of the image is too low relative to the print resolution. Since the resolution of the digital press image is 600 dpi, or even higher, you must ensure that the original image was taken by a digital camera or scanned at 300 dpi pixels to ensure that the print quality is acceptable.

You can use a higher scanning resolution and then reduce it to 300 dpi, but do not increase it by more than 10%. Even though the image editing software allows the resolution to be increased by a small number of keystrokes, the apparent increase in resolution causes the above mentioned results to appear in the image, and even worse.

The most confusing technical specification in printing is how much resolution is used in the images taken or scanned because scanning equipment and imaging equipment have developed over the years. Some printers and photo artists are still using standards that were applied to older devices a few years ago, and these devices and standards are now obsolete. Don't be surprised if you hear something "odd" that sounds weird. For example, the scanning resolution is equal to, or even twice, three times the output resolution.

Another questionable one is that the expansion of the manuscript exceeds the limit. For images that you want to print (as opposed to online or electronic files) on digital or conventional presses, do not increase the amount by more than 10% to 15% of the original size. Expanding beyond these few ranges will cause printing equipment to fill the image space with too little data, leading to the aforementioned problems.

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