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Screening technology for expanded colour gamut printing
Screening technology for expanded colour gamut printing Andy Cave Whatever name you know it by – fixed palette, Expanded Colour Gamut (ECG), extended process, N-colour, or something else – the objective is the same: To simulate spot colours using screen tint builds of four or more colours to provide more choice to brand owners while increasing production throughput and reducing …
How does the ideal printing company of tomorrow actually look like?
How does the ideal printing company of tomorrow actually look like? This is of course a speculative article and some of you may think that I have got a stroke due to the hot weather – however, the reason why I wanted to write this is mainly because most printing companies today are not in a position where you can …
Screening technology for expanded colour gamut printing
From Narrow WebTech magazine, May 2018 https://narrowwebtech.com/ Related content:
To maximise quality you must eliminate ‘quality’
To maximise quality you must eliminate ‘quality’ Ask a group of flexo printers if they consider themselves to be “quality” printers, and you’ll typically receive an emphatic chorus of “yes.” But if you ask them to define what they mean by “quality” you’ll usually get blank stares. If the “quality” of print is critical to you, but you can’t define …
Will DM technology usher in a new screening revolution?
Will DM technology usher in a new screening revolution? Simon Nias Wednesday, April 25, 2012 Whether, conventional, stochastic or hybrid, or to use their respective abbreviations AM, FM or XM, halftone screens have long been associated with improving print quality. From the mid-nineties to the mid-noughties there was a rush of screening advances that, together with the switch from analogue …
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