enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Spot color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spot_color

    When making a multi-color print with a spot color process, every spot color needs its own lithographic film. All the areas of the same spot color are printed using the same film, hence, using the same lithographic plate. The dot gain, hence the screen angle and line frequency, of a spot color vary

  3. CMYK color model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMYK_color_model

    Some printing presses are capable of printing with both four-color process inks and additional spot color inks at the same time. High-quality printed materials, such as marketing brochures and books, often include photographs requiring process-color printing, other graphic effects requiring spot colors (such as metallic inks), and finishes such ...

  4. Color printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_printing

    Generally, spot-color inks are formulations that are designed to print alone, rather than to blend with other inks on the paper to produce various hues and shades. The range of spot color inks, much like paint, is nearly unlimited and much more varied than the colors that can be produced by four-color-process printing. Spot-color inks range ...

  5. Trap (printing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_(printing)

    The same approach applies if one of the colors is a spot color and the other a process color. Trapping becomes more difficult if both colors are process colors and each is to be printed as a combination of the basic printing colors cyan, magenta, yellow and black. In this case, the trapping decision depends on the amount of ‘common’ color.

  6. Printing registration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printing_registration

    Other colors, regardless of their relative luminance, are always trapped to (spread under) these spot colors. If several of these spot colors are used (a common practice in the packaging market), the order of printing layers rather than luminance is the decisive element: the first color to be printed is spread under the next color.

  7. HKS (colour system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HKS_(colour_system)

    The HKS is a colour system which contains 120 spot colours and 3520 tones for coated and uncoated paper. HKS is an abbreviation of three German colour manufacturers: Hostmann-Steinberg Druckfarben, Kast + Ehinger Druckfarben, and H. Schmincke & Co. The association of those three companies have defined the colours of the HKS system since 1968.

  8. Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments:

  9. Spectral printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_Printing

    Spectral printing is the art and science of reproducing the spectra of a scene-referred image, by means of hard-copy printing using more than four process-colour printing inks namely cyan, magenta, yellow and black and their lighter versions. The additional secondary inks are often referred to as spot colours.