scholarly journals Color Management. Color Printing Characteristic Analysis on Newspapers Using ISO Color Output Targed.

1996 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 735-739
Author(s):  
Masayuki Nakajima
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (1) ◽  
pp. 170-176
Author(s):  
Peter Morovic ◽  
Ján Morovic ◽  
Peter Klammer ◽  
Javier Maestro ◽  
Garry Hinch ◽  
...  

With printing technologies continuously reaching ever higher degrees of performance and quality, the need for novelty and impact and also keeps increasing. Specialty inks have always played an important role here, albeit not without challenges. Often the use of such materials involved dedicated solutions that deal with these inks outside of the constraints of normal pipelines and workflows, which constrains their application and results in limited use. This is so since specialty inks, such as fluorescents, behave differently to traditional dye or pigment-based ones. So much so that most applications use specialty inks as spot colors, explicitly determining (by means of a separate layer in the input) where they are to be used for given content. For example, for materials such as fluorescents or quantum dots, the possibility of presenting more light at a given wavelength than is incident at that wavelength, breaks some of the basic assumptions of current processes, from how they are measured to how they can be used in building color separations all the way to how color management deals with them. In this paper we describe first experiments of using fluorescent inks that are activated by visible – instead of the more customary UV – radiation, showing performance of spectrophotometer measurement with a dedicated model to handle the specific properties of these inks, as well as results of the impact such inks can have on extending color gamuts that go significantly beyond current printing gamuts and therefore also pose new challenges.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 17-31
Author(s):  
Haji Naik Dharavath ◽  

The purpose of this applied research was to determine the Color Managed Digital Printing Workflow (CMDPW) consistency (4th C of the color management) over a period of time [100 days, (N = 100)]. The quality of digital color printing is determined by these influential factors: screening method applied, type of printing process, calibration method, device profile, ink (dry-toner or liquid-toner), printer resolution and the substrate (paper). For this research, only the color printing attributes such as the overall average color deviation [ACD, ΔE (2000)] and the solid ink density (SID) were analyzed to examine the CMDPW process consistency in a day-to- day digital printing operation. These are the color attributes which are monitored and managed for quality accuracy during the printing. Printed colors of the random sample size (n = 80) were measured against the GRACoL2013 standards to derive the colorimetric/densitometric values. Reference colorimetric values used in the analysis were the threshold deviations (acceptable color deviations) as outlined in the ISO12647-7 standards (GRACoL2013). A control charts analysis was applied for further determining the process (CMDPW) SID and ACD variation. The data collected were run through multiple software applications (MS-Excel/SPSS/Minitab) to apply various statistical methods. Analyzed data from the experiment revealed that the printed colorimetric values were in match (aligned) with the GRACoL 2013 (reference/target). Since the SID values of CMYK colors were in control throughout the process, this enabled the CMDPW to produce consistent acceptable color deviation (Average Printed ΔE (2000) = 2.978; SD = 0.437; Acceptable Threshold color deviation is ΔE (2000) ≤ 3.00).


2012 ◽  
Vol 263-266 ◽  
pp. 2195-2198
Author(s):  
Hong Jun Tang ◽  
Xiao Jie Xiu

Conventional color-printing systems often use three or more inks, such as CMY, CMYK or CMYKLcLm. When the inks hues exceeds three, such as CMYKRGB, CMYKOrG and so on, there is the usual color-management one-to-many mapping problem. An algorithm was developed for multi-inks printing in which the one-to-many mapping problem was overcome by dividing the standard color space into several sub-spaces, founding the relationships between the sub-spaces and the printing color-separations and building the lookup table. The algorithm was tested using a digital inkjet printer-Mutoh8000 of CMYKOrGB. Mutoh8000 prints separated color blocks using this algorithm were compared with a generic ICC profile for CMYKLcLm prints. The CMYK inks were common to both prints. The algorithm has been proved effective and improved color printing quality significantly.


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 612-612
Author(s):  
Motoo Araki ◽  
Po N. Lam ◽  
Daniel J. Culkin ◽  
Pamela E. Fox ◽  
Glenn M. Sulley ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 128 (12) ◽  
pp. 1373-1380
Author(s):  
Satoshi Sugahara ◽  
Kouhei Yamada ◽  
Haruhiko Nishio ◽  
Masaharu Edo ◽  
Toshiro Sato ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-85
Author(s):  
Pooshpanjan Roy Biswas ◽  
Alessandro Beltrami ◽  
Joan Saez Gomez

To reproduce colors in one system which differs from another system in terms of the color gamut, it is necessary to use a color gamut mapping process. This color gamut mapping is a method to translate a specific color from a medium (screen, digital camera, scanner, digital file, etc) into another system having a difference in gamut volume. There are different rendering intent options defined by the International Color Consortium [5] to use the different reproduction goals of the user [19]. Any rendering intent used to reproduce colors, includes profile engine decisions to do it, i.e. looking for color accuracy, vivid colors or pleasing reproduction of images. Using the same decisions on different profile engines, the final visual output can look different (more than one Just Noticeable Difference[16]) depending on the profile engine used and the color algorithms that they implement. Profile performance substantially depends on the profiler engine used to create them. Different profilers provide the user with varying levels of liberty to design a profile for their color management needs and preference. The motivation of this study is to rank the performance of various market leading profiler engines on the basis of different metrics designed specifically to report the performance of particular aspects of these profiles. The study helped us take valuable decisions regarding profile performance without any visual assessment to decide on the best profiler engine.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (15) ◽  
pp. 350-1-350-10
Author(s):  
Yin Wang ◽  
Baekdu Choi ◽  
Davi He ◽  
Zillion Lin ◽  
George Chiu ◽  
...  

In this paper, we will introduce a novel low-cost, small size, portable nail printer. The usage of this system is to print any desired pattern on a finger nail in just a few minutes. The detailed pre-processing procedures will be described in this paper. These include image processing to find the correct printing zone, and color management to match the patterns’ color. In each phase, a novel algorithm will be introduced to refine the result. The paper will state the mathematical principles behind each phase, and show the experimental results, which illustrate the algorithms’ capabilities to handle the task.


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