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QTR-Quadtone RIP

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Creating Curves for 2400

Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-09 by castlerockphotography

Hello all, I am trying to create a curve for a R2400 and HW Matte 
paper. I have printed the inkseparation page but am having 
difficulties determining what percentage to use for the next step. The 
instructions say to determine at what point the inks cover the paper 
and the pattern disappears. It never does for the light light black 
ink. Has anyone created curves for the 2400? Should I ignore the light 
light black ink and base my decision on ink density of the light black 
ink instead?

Thanks so much....

Dan.

Re: [QuadtoneRIP] Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-09 by Tom Husband

Dan,

For the ink separation page you should base your decision on the PK or MK
ink not LK or LLK.  After you determine where the black ink (PK or MK) tops
out you set the Ink Calibration at that percentage (usually around 75-85%)
and print the separation test page again.  Then you determine the density of
each ink in relation to the next darker one.  See page 13 of Tom Moore's
User Guide.

Hope that helps a bit.

Tom Husband

On 2/9/07, castlerockphotography <castlerockphotography@...> wrote:
>
> Hello all, I am trying to create a curve for a R2400 and HW Matte
> paper. I have printed the inkseparation page but am having
> difficulties determining what percentage to use for the next step. The
> instructions say to determine at what point the inks cover the paper
> and the pattern disappears. It never does for the light light black
> ink. Has anyone created curves for the 2400? Should I ignore the light
> light black ink and base my decision on ink density of the light black
> ink instead?
>
> Thanks so much....
>
> Dan.
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-09 by Daniel

Tom,

this is a different dan.

thanks for the clarification. 

i've always wondered about this part of the procedure because i think the instruction's 
wording on the mac os x side seem to imply that i should identify the ink limit of each ink. 
eventually i've decided that the instruction was referring only to K ink's limit. identify this 
limit and then print the ink separation again for the next step, the ink partitioning. when i 
got this straighten out everything else fell into place.

--- In QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com, "Tom Husband" <tom.husband@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Dan,
> 
> For the ink separation page you should base your decision on the PK or MK
> ink not LK or LLK.  After you determine where the black ink (PK or MK) tops
> out you set the Ink Calibration at that percentage (usually around 75-85%)
> and print the separation test page again.  Then you determine the density of
> each ink in relation to the next darker one.  See page 13 of Tom Moore's
> User Guide.
> 
> Hope that helps a bit.
> 
> Tom Husband

Re: [QuadtoneRIP] Re: Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-09 by Tom Husband

Yes, I should have said I was speaking from the PC side of things but I
assume the Mac side is done the same way.

Tom

On 2/9/07, Daniel <dchow1961@...> wrote:
>
> Tom,
>
> this is a different dan.
>
> thanks for the clarification.
>
> i've always wondered about this part of the procedure because i think the
> instruction's
> wording on the mac os x side seem to imply that i should identify the ink
> limit of each ink.
> eventually i've decided that the instruction was referring only to K ink's
> limit. identify this
> limit and then print the ink separation again for the next step, the ink
> partitioning. when i
> got this straighten out everything else fell into place.
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-09 by castlerockphotography

Tom, Thanks so much. I did read it, guess I misunderstood. Will read 
again. Really appreciate the clarification!

--- In QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com, "Tom Husband" <tom.husband@...> 
wrote:
>
> Dan,
> 
> For the ink separation page you should base your decision on the PK 
or MK
> ink not LK or LLK.  After you determine where the black ink (PK or 
MK) tops
> out you set the Ink Calibration at that percentage (usually around 
75-85%)
> and print the separation test page again.  Then you determine the 
density of
> each ink in relation to the next darker one.  See page 13 of Tom 
Moore's
> User Guide.
> 
> Hope that helps a bit.
> 
> Tom Husband
> 
> On 2/9/07, castlerockphotography <castlerockphotography@...> wrote:
> >
> > Hello all, I am trying to create a curve for a R2400 and HW Matte
> > paper. I have printed the inkseparation page but am having
> > difficulties determining what percentage to use for the next 
step. The
> > instructions say to determine at what point the inks cover the 
paper
> > and the pattern disappears. It never does for the light light 
black
> > ink. Has anyone created curves for the 2400? Should I ignore the 
light
> > light black ink and base my decision on ink density of the light 
black
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> > ink instead?
> >
> > Thanks so much....
> >
> > Dan.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

Re: Creating Curves for 2400

2007-02-12 by Jeff Randall

Also check out the Calibration pdf in the download area for a more 
detailed description than in Tom's guide.

--- In QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com, "castlerockphotography" 
<castlerockphotography@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> 
> Tom, Thanks so much. I did read it, guess I misunderstood. Will read 
> again. Really appreciate the clarification!
>

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