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Colour & Quality

2nd Edition
00.992.6402a E (Colour & Quality)

Copyright © 1995/1999
Colour & Quality

Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Kurfürsten-Anlage 52 – 60
D-69115 Heidelberg
Telefon + 49-62 21-92-00
Fax + 49-62 21-92-69 99
Colour & Quality
Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
translated, reproduced, or transmitted, in any form or by
any means, without the written permission of the copyright
holder. Any offense will be prosecuted.

Photography
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Tony Stone, Page 8
Bavaria, Page 31

2nd revised edition


Copyright © 1995/1999
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Kurfürsten-Anlage 52 – 60
D-69115 Heidelberg
Telefon + 49-62 21-92-00
Fax + 49-62 21-92-69 99

Fee: DM 15.00
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Light and colour 1


1.1 Light is colour 8
1.2 Visual perception of colour 10
1.3 Colour mixture 12
1.4 Systems of colour classification 16

Colour reproduction in printing 2


2.1 Ink film thickness 22
2.2 The significance of the halftone value in printing 24
2.3 Contrast 34
2.4 Colour balance/image build-up
35
2.5 Ink trapping and colour sequence 40
2.6 Print control strips 43

3
Densitometry
3.1 Measuring principle of a reflection densitometer 48
3.2 The use of filters in densitometry 50
3.3 Measuring values in densitometry 53
3.4 Measurement 56
3.5 Evaluation 58
3.6 Standardisation in printing 60
3.7 Limits of densitometry 62

4
Colorimetrics
4.1 Measuring colour 68
4.2 Tristimulus values/white reference 70
4.3 Standard illuminants 70
4.4 Standard observer/colour matching functions 72
4.5 Evaluation with a spectrophotometer 74
4.6 Colour difference ∆E 76
4.7 Munsell 86
4.8 Tristimulus method 87
4.9 Spectral colour measurement 88
4.10 The measuring principle of the Heidelberg
CPC 21 spectral quality control 90
4.11 Proof and colour control strips 91
4.12 Ink control with Heidelberg CPC 21 93
4.13 Advantages of colorimetrics for offset printing 98
Light and colour

1 Light and colour


1.1 Light is colour 8
1.2 Visual perception of colour 10
1.3 Colour mixture 12
1.3.1 Additive colour mixture 12
1.3.2 Subtractive colour mixture 13
1.3.3 Autotypical colour mixture 15
1.4 Systems of colour classification 16

7
1.1 Light is colour

We live in a colourful world. With the help of colours we


brighten up our surroundings to make us feel good.
Interior design and colour schemes directly influence our
impressions and feelings. Colours that go well together
create a harmonious balance, putting us in a good mood.
The printing industry also uses colours to make presenta-
tions more effective. The quality demands on printed
materials supplied to customers are increasing all the time.
To meet these new demands, new standards of quality have
to be introduced.
In order to judge colours we have to “see” them.
For this purpose we need light.
The sun emits light – it is a primary light source.
Most objects in our environment, however, do not emit light
themselves. They are so-called secondary light sources.
We can perceive them and their colours only if they are
illuminated by light.

8
Light is radiation which propagates very quickly – at a speed
of 300,000 kilometers per second. Strictly speaking, light
consists of electromagnetic oscillations spreading out from
their source like waves. Like a water wave, each light wave
consists of a crest and a trough.

wave crest

wave trough

Waves are classified on the basis of either their length or the


number of oscillations they perform per second.
Wavelengths are given in units such as kilometers, meters,
centimeters, millimeters, nanometers or picometers.
The number of oscillations per second – the frequency – is
measured in Hertz.

Waves of different lengths possess different properties.


X-rays, for example, are used in medicine for diagnostic
purposes, while many households are already equipped with
microwave ovens. Other kinds of waves serve to transmit red (approx. 700 nm)

telephone calls as well as radio and television programs.

Only a very small range of electromagnetic waves is seen by


us as coloured light. The visible portion of the wave spec-
green (approx. 550 nm)
trum lies between 380 nm (ultraviolet light) and 780 nm
(infrared light). By means of a prism, light can be broken up
into its colour components. White light, being composed of
all the colours of the spectrum, is broken up into all the
colours of the rainbow. blue (approx. 400 nm)

The following illustration shows how the wavelengths from


red to green to blue become shorter and shorter.

9
X-rays UV IR Radiofrequency
Gamma Microwaves Radar TV FM Radio
rays UHF KB MB LB

Wavelenght

Visible range

1.2 Visual perception of colour

It is only in conjunction with light that colours become


“visible” – but why?

Colour can not be regarded as a characteristic feature of an


object, as can its shape. Yet it is a property of objects to
either absorb or reflect light of certain wavelengths.
We can only perceive the colours that correspond to the
reflected wavelengths.

10
If white light reaches an object, one of the following may
occur:

■ All the light is absorbed. In this case we perceive the


object as black.
■ All the light is reflected. In this case the object appears as
white.
■ All the light is let through the object. In this case the
colour of the light does not change.
■ Part of the light is absorbed, the rest is reflected.
We perceive a colour whose hue depends on which
wavelengths are reflected and which are absorbed.
■ Part of the light is absorbed, the rest is transmitted.
We see a colour whose hue depends on which
wavelengths are absorbed and which are transmitted.
■ Part of the light is reflected, the rest is transmitted.
Under these circumstances the colour of the reflected and
that of the transmitted light changes.

The properties of the illuminated object determine which of


the above-mentioned effects is likely to occur.

Light reflected or transmitted by an object is received by our


eyes and transformed into nervous impulses, which trigger
the colour sensation in our brain.

11
The retina of the human eye
contains light-sensitive cells.
There are two kinds of cells:
rods and cones. The rods distin-
guish between bright and dark,
whereas the cones react to
colours. There are three kinds of
cones, each of which is sensitive
Paper to certain wavelengths. Part of
them reacts to light within a
range of 400 to 500 nm and is therefore sensitive to blue
light. Other cones can “see” only within a range of 500 to
600 nm, i.e. only green light. The third kind of cone is recep-
tive to red light, which lies within a range of 600 to 700 nm.

This composition of rods and cones renders the human eye


so sensitive that it is capable of perceiving and distin-
guishing millions of colours.

1.3 Colour mixture

1.3.1 Additive colour mixture

An additive mixture of colours is a superimposition of light


composed of different colours. If all the colours of the spec-
trum are added together, the colour white results.

Red, green and blue are the additive primary colours.


They are so-called one-third colours because each
represents one third of the visible spectrum.
The principle of the additive colour mixture can be illustra-
ted very well with three diascopes, each of which produces a
light spot on a screen in one of the three additive primary
colours.

12
Within the overlapping areas of the three
green + red = yellow
light spots the following secondary
green + blue = cyan
colours emerge:
blue + red = magenta
blue + red + green = white
no light = black

The principle of additive colour mixture is used in colour TV and


in the theater to produce all the colours of the visible spectrum.

1.3.2 Subtractive colour mixture

For subtractive colour mixture individual colour components


are taken from white light. If all the colour components are
removed, the colour black results.

Cyan, magenta and yellow are the subtractive primary


colours. They are two-third colours because each represents
two thirds of the visible spectrum.

They can be produced by subtracting an additive primary


colour from white light (for example by means of a filter), or
by superimposing the light of two additive primary colours.

Printing inks are transparent substances that function like


colour filters. Which colour results if a blue-absorbing sub-
stance is printed on white paper?

Blue is removed from white light;


the other components (green and
red) are reflected. The additive
superimposition of these two
colours produces yellow.
This is the colour we perceive.
The printing ink has thus sub-
tracted one third (i.e. blue) from
the white light (consisting of red,
Paper
green and blue).

13
Let us assume that two transparent substances are printed
one upon another, for example, the printing inks “yellow”
and “cyan”. The substances successively filter the blue and
red portion from the white light. As a result, we perceive
green light. Together, the printing inks have subtracted two
thirds of the colour components.

Paper
Paper

When cyan, magenta and yellow are printed in layers one


upon another the incident light is totally absorbed, (i.e. there
is no reflection); we perceive the colour black.

Paper
Paper

14
In subtractive colour mixture the follow-
cyan + yellow = green
ing secondary colours will result when
yellow + magenta = red
cyan, magenta and yellow are printed
magenta + cyan = blue
one upon another.
cyan + magenta + yellow = black
no colour = white

1.3.3 Autotypical colour mixture

Colour images are printed using the four printing inks cyan,
magenta, yellow and black. The black printing ink improves
the sharpness and depth of pictures. This is because, due to
the properties of the pigments of chromatic colours, the
black colour subtractively mixed from cyan, magenta and
yellow, is never really dark black as such.

In offset printing the size of the dots depends on the desired


hue. When printed, the dots of the individual colours are
partly juxtaposed or partly or totally printed one upon an-
other. If we look at the dots through a magnifying glass (see
illustration), we perceive colours which – except for the
white of the paper – are the result of subtractive colour
mixture. However, without a magnifying glass and from a
normal distance, the human eye cannot discern the indi-
vidual dots. In this case the printed colours are mixed
additively.

The composition of additive and subtractive colour mixture


is called autotypical colour mixture.
[Illustration: diagram of additive and subtractive colour
mixtures.]

15
1.4 Systems of colour classification

Each individual perceives colours in a different way.


A description of hues by several persons will there-
fore lead to very different results.

Printers, however, need standardised criteria for


colour identification. For this purpose different
systems of colour classification have been established.
Some printing ink manufacturers produce sample books
and give the colours names such as Novavit 4F 434. Others
use colour fans like HKS and Pantone. The colour circle is
another aid. It may consist of 6, 12, 24 or more parts.
All these systems set out examples of the individual colour
hues and give them names. Yet they are never complete and
mostly unsuitable for calculations.

As we have seen, our chromatic sensation depends on the


stimulation of the receptors in our eye, which are sensitive
to red, green and blue. Thus, for an unambiguous classifica-
tion of various colours three values are needed.

With the help of such a system green, for example, could be


described as: green = 0 × red + 1 × green + 0 × blue or, even
shorter, G = 0 × R + 1 × G + 0 × B.

If one draws the primary colours as the axes of a coordinate


system a so-called colour space is obtained.
Many experts have discussed systems of colour classification
and established different notions of how a colour space
should be designed. All of these colour spaces
have advantages and disadvantages.

16
Y

The most important colour spaces have been standard-


100
ised internationally. They are used in many
80
branches of industry, for example in the
dyeing and lacquer industry, in the 60
y
textile industry, in food production
0.8
and in medicine. The CIE standard 40
colour chart has gained worldwide accep- 0.6

tance. (The abbreviation CIE stands for 20


E
0.4
0.8 x
“Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage”.) 0.6
0.2 0 0.4
0.2
This system uses the variables X, Y and Z for the “colour 0.0 0.0

content values” instead of R, G and B. For practical reasons


the chromaticity coordinates x and y and the luminance
factor Y are determined from these coordinates.
(The luminance factor Y is used as a lightness measure of
object colours.) The location of each colour can be precisely
defined using these three coordinates.

Colours of the same lightness can be drawn in two dimen-


sions, i.e. in a single plane. A cross section of the CIE colour
space in a lightness plane is a CIE chromaticity diagram.

Spectral colours are the most saturated colours that can be


produced for a given hue (wavelength). They are located on
the border of the CIE chromaticity diagram. The illustration
shows the spectrum loci together with the corresponding
wavelengths in nanometers. The straight line connecting the
wavelengths 380 nm and 780 nm is called the purple line.
All the trichromatic units of colours made through additive
mixture of spectrum loci lie within the area surrounded by
the spectrum locus and the purple line.

The central trichromatic unit has the coordinates x = 0.333


and y = 0.333. It is abbreviated as E (for “equi-energy spec-
trum”) for primary light sources and sometimes also A (for
“achromatic”) in the case of object colours.

17
Visually perceptible colours within a

lightness plane of the CIE colour space

(standard colour chart). 0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

The saturation of all colours increases from the central


trichromatic unit towards the spectrum locus.

The Euroscale DIN 16 539 describes the position of the


colour locations for cyan, magenta and yellow for three-
colour and four-colour offset printing. It also defines the
colour locations for the subtractive secondary colours red,
green and blue.

The following chromaticity diagram shows the colour loca-


tions as laid down in DIN 16 539 as well as the range of
colours that can be produced in printing. This distribution is
very similar for all lightness values.
Colour hues located within the hexagon can be reproduced
in four-colour offset printing using the colours of the Euro-
scale. Colours outside this area can only be produced with
the aid of additional special colours.

18
Range of reproducible colours of Euro-

scale DIN 16 539.


0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

In Euroscale DIN 16 539 the following values for coated


paper have been defined for specified printing and measur-
ing conditions:

Primary and Colour Luminance


secondary colours coordinates factor
x y Y

Yellow 0.437 0.494 77.8


Magenta 0.464 0.232 17.1
Cyan 0.153 0.196 21.9
Yellow-magenta 0.613 0.324 16.3
Yellow-cyan 0.194 0.526 16.5
Magenta-cyan 0.179 0.101 2.8

The values for x, y and Y are measured using spectrophoto-


meters. They exist as handsets or as computing centers with
on-line machine control (as in the Heidelberg CPC 21).

19
Colour reproduction in printing

2 Colour reproduction in printing


2.1 Ink film thickness 22
2.2 The significance of the halftone value in printing 24
2.2.1 Halftone value shifts 24
2.2.2 Dot gain 31
2.2.3 Print characteristic 32
2.3 Contrast 34
2.4 Colour balance/image built-up 35
2.4.1 Chromatic composition 35
2.4.2 Achromatic composition 36
2.4.3 Chromatic composition with under colour
addition (UCA) 37
2.4.4 Chromatic composition with under colour
chromatic removal (UCR) 37
2.4.5 Chromatic composition with gray stabilization 38
2.4.6 Chromatic composition with gray component
replacement (GCR) 38
2.4.7 Five-, six- and seven-colour printing 39
2.5 Ink trapping and colour sequence 40
2.5.1 Ink trapping 40
2.5.2 Colour sequence 42
2.6 Print control strips 43
2.6.1 Solid patches (fields) 44
2.6.2 Overprint patches (fields) 44
2.6.3 Colour balance patches (fields) 44
2.6.4 Halftone patches (fields) 45
2.6.5 Slur/doubling patches (fields) 45
2.6.6 Plate exposure control patches (fields) 45

21
Quality assurance in printing aims at a correct and constant
colour reproduction throughout the whole print-run.
In addition to the printing ink and the colour of the printing
stock the most important parameters are ink film thickness,
halftone value, colour balance, ink trapping and the
sequence of colours.

2.1 Ink film thickness

For technical reasons the maximum ink film thickness in


offset printing is about 3.5 µm.

For coated paper and process colours according to


DIN 16 539 the correct colour locations should be achieved
with ink film thicknesses between 0.7 and 1.1 µm.

If unsuitable lithographies, inappropriate printing stock or


unsuitable printing ink are used, however, it may happen
that the standardised points at the corners of the CIE chro-
maticity diagram are not reached.

The range of reproduceable colours also decreases if the


saturation is insufficient. In the illustration the white area
shows how the range of colours narrows with the under-
inking of each of the three process colours.

In terms of physics the influence of the ink film thickness on


the optical appearance can be explained as follows.

Printing inks do not cover the paper; they are, rather, trans-
parent. The light penetrates the ink. In passing through the
ink it encounters pigments which absorb to a greater or
lesser extent certain wavelengths.

22
0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

The higher the pigment concentration and the thickness of


the ink film, the more pigments are hit by the incident light
and, consequently, the more of it is absorbed.
Finally, the light rays reach the (white) surface of the print-
ing stock and are reflected. On its way back the light has to
pass through the ink film again and only then can it reach
the observer’s eye.

A thick printing ink film absorbs more light and reflects less
than a thin one; the observer therefore perceives a darker,
more saturised, colour hue. The portion of light reaching the
eye thus serves as a basis for the assessment of each colour.

23
2.2 The significance of the halftone value in printing

Next to the printing ink the halftone value is the most impor-
tant parameter for the optical appearance of a colour hue.
The halftone value indicates how much of the printing stock
is covered by ink. The brighter the colour hue to be repro-
duced the smaller the covered area will be.
For the reproduction of different colour hues in classical
scanning with a constant scanning frequency halftone-dots
are used, whose size will depend on the desired hue.
In contrast to this, in frequency-modulated scanning differ-
ent dot spacings are used to produce different hues (all the
dots having the same size). Generally, halftone values are
expressed in percent.

2.2.1 Halftone value shifts

When a halftone dot is transferred from the film via the


plate and the blanket to the printing stock, several factors
may change its geometric size, and thus also its halftone
value.

The alterations in halftone value caused by processing can


be compensated in the pre-press stage. A curve describing
the transfer characteristics is obtained by measuring print-
ing patterns and comparing them to the originals. If during
the entire printing process (from scanning to the finished
print product) the same (standardised) parameters are
always used one can expect the print product to be true to
the original.

Halftone value shifts caused by difficulties in printing, how-


ever, cannot be foreseen. Special attention has to be paid to
them during the printing process. The most important ones
are:

24
Transfer of the Influencing factors Features of the halftone dots
halftone dot

Film Film tape edges, adhesives


Mounting
Exposure
Chemicals,
Development duration of development
Two halftone dots on the
film (appr. 150fold
magnification).

Printing plate Material, abrasion due to


printing
Plate exposure exposure time, vacuum,
side lighting

Dampening Amount of dampening solution,


pH value, surface tension, Halftone dots on the plate.
water hardness,
temperature
Inking Thickness of ink coat,
consistency, temperature
Printing
plate/blanket Rolling/packing
Halftone dots on the plate
after inking.

Blanket Material, condition,


surface
Printing blanket/
printing stock Rolling/packing

Halftone dots on the blanket.

25
Transfer of the Influencing factors Features of the halftone
halftone dots dots

Printing Stock Surface, paper quality


Sheet transport Transfer register
Delivery Offset

The large magnification


clearly shows the first-rate
result

Increase/decrease of the halftone value

Dot gain means that there is an increase in halftone value


Dot gain during the printing process as compared to the dot on the
film. The increase is in part due to processing, material, and
machines, and thus cannot be influenced by the pressman
(this aspect is also called enlargement of halftone dots).
To a certain degree, the pressman can counteract dot gain,
especially by manipulating the inking.

Filling-in
Filling-in means the reduction of non-printing areas up to
their complete disappearance. Filling-in may also be caused
by slur or doubling.

Sharpening means a decrease in halftone value as compared


Sharpening to the dot on the film. In practice, the term sharpening is
often used to describe the reduced increase in halftone
value, though the print may still be fuller as compared to the
film.

26
Deformation of halftone dots

Slur means that the form of the halftone dot is changed Slur
during the printing process due to relative motions between
plate and blanket and/or blanket and printing sheet, that is,
a circular point may become oval. Slur in the printing direc-
tion is called circumferential slur, and slur at right angles to
the printing direction is called lateral slur. Diagonal slur
results if both forms of slur occur at the same time. Doubling

In offset printing, doubling means that a shadow-like and


unintended, in general smaller, ink dot appears besides the
intended halftone dot. Doubling is caused by an incongruent
retransfer of ink by the subsequent blanket.

The term offsetting refers to those deformations of halftone Offsetting


dots that are caused by mechanical factors after the printing
process. The term offset is also used to describe the transfer
of ink from freshly printed matter on to another surface.

Points for the pressman to observe

With the help of control strips, dot gain can be monitored correct wrong
visually and measured in size. For purely visual checks,
signal strips are particularly well suited. Filling-in can be
best monitored with the help of screen measuring elements
with high halftone values.

Dot gain and clogging are mostly caused by excess ink feed-
ing not enough water feeding, too much pressure between
plate and blanket, or by a poorly clamped blanket.
Furthermore, the inking and damping form rollers may not
be well adjusted.

27
correct wrong Under normal printing conditions and precise plate expo-
sure the print is generally fuller than the film. Defects such
as blind plates and build-up of ink on the blanket may cause
sharpening. Remedies might be: more frequent washing of
the blankets and inking units; changing the inks and the
colour sequence; checking plate rollers, printing pressure,
and printing process.

Slur is most obviously signalised by line screens. The paral-


lel lines often indicate the direction of slur. Circumferential
slur normally indicates printing differences that have
emerged between plate cylinder and blanket cylinder, or
excessive printing pressure. This is why each step of the
printing process and the printing pressure should be moni-
tored very carefully. Slur may also be caused by a poorly
clamped blanket or by excessive inking. Lateral slur is
mostly associated with other problems. In this case, the
printing stock and the blanket should be carefully checked.

Doubling is monitored on the basis of the same elements as


slur. In addition, halftone dots have to be examined with a
magnifying glass, since the line screens alone do not allow to
distinguish between doubling and slur. Doubling may be
caused by various factors, most of which are related more or
less closely with the printing stock.

Offsetting problems hardly ever occur with modern sheet-fed


presses. Those areas of a sheet-fed press that support the
freshly printed side of the sheet mechanically are most likely
to cause offset. Stiff printing stock makes offset problems
more likely. Offset may also emerge in the pile or in per-
fector machines.

28
Printed signal elements such as the SLUR strip are a valua-
ble tool for the quick optical evaluation of halftone value
alterations. Signal elements such as the SLUR strip optically
amplify faults in the printing process.

Faults such as dot gain, sharpening, slur and doubling affect


fine screen elements more than coarse ones. The reason is
that small dots are reduced or enlarged by the same values
as large ones. A large number of small dots, however, has
many times the total circumference length of coarse dots of
the same tone value. This is why, during printing, more ink
is deposited around the fine dots than around the coarse
dots. As a consequence, the fine screen image areas will
appear darker. This phenomenon is the basis on which
signal and measuring elements function.

To give an example, the structure and the function of the


SLUR strip will be briefly explained. In the SLUR strip,
coarse screen elements (surroundings) and fine screen ele-
ments (numbers) are combined.

Compared with the uniform halftone value of the coarse


screen, the fine-screen numbers from 0 to 9 have increa-
singly sharp halftone values. When during the print run of a
properly printed sheet the figure 3 and the coarse-screen
field display the same halftone value, then the figure 3 can
no longer be recognized. If dot gain occurs during printing,
however, then the next-higher figure with a sharper screen
approaches the halftone value of the surroundings.
The more dot gain takes place, the more the halftone value
equality shifts towards higher numbers.

With sharpening, this process is reversed. Here the figures


2, 1 or even 0 may become illegible.

29
O.K

Gain

Sharpening

Lateral slur

Circumferential
slur

Yet the figures merely indicate whether dot gain or sharp-


ening occurs. The causes have to be looked for with a
magnifying glass on the plate or on the printed sheet itself.
The SLUR section to the right of the numbers shows whether
there is dot gain, slurring, or doubling. With dot gain in
printing, the word SLUR is not more legible than with good
printing, although the entire field appears somewhat darker.

Halftone dots, however, are less suited for detecting slurring


and doubling. The typical, direction-related, widening in
cases of slur is easier to detect in the SLUR field. In the case
of circumferential slur, for example, the horizontal lines
forming the word SLUR (parallel to the image start) will be
widened. With lateral slur, on the other hand, the area sur-
rounding the word SLUR, which consists of vertical lines,
will be darker.

The illustration shows how dot variations affect the print


result, using dot gain as an example. Even if the dots of only
one colour are larger than desired, a different hue will
result.

30
correct wrong

This, of course, is also important for superimposition.


The transfer process used in offset printing usually causes
the dots to become larger. This effect is called dot gain.

Signal strips help to assess the quality of the print result, but
they do not provide information on absolute values and
errors. To assess the quality of halftone values with objec-
tively verifiable numbers an objective measurement method
is therefore needed.

2.2.2 Dot gain

Dot gain is the difference between the halftone values in the


screen film and in print. Deviations result both from geomet-
rical dot variations and from the effect of light entrapment
(see Chapter 3.4.4).

Similar to the halftone value F, the dot gain Z is generally


expressed in percent. (The formulae for the dot gain Z are
given in Chapter 3.5.1).

The dot gain is the difference between the halftone value in


print FD and the measured halftone value in film FF.

31
Since the dot gain is different in the various halftone value
ranges, the figures on dot gain should also include the
halftone value in film. Example: “15 % dot gain with
FF = 40 %” or, shorter, “Z40 = 15 %”.

Advanced measuring instruments display the dot gain directly.

N.B.: The dot gain Z(%) indicates the difference be-


tween the halftone value on film FF and the
halftone value in print FD in absolute figures.
It therefore does not refer to the film value!

2.2.3 Print characteristic

The deviation of the halftone value in print FD as against the


halftone value FF in film can be clearly represented for direct
use in repro work in the form of what is called a print char-
acteristic.

To determine the print characteristic, screen step scales


with a minimum of three, or even better five or more screen
steps and a solid patch element are printed. A densitometer
is used to measure the ink densities in the solid patch and in
the screen steps, and subsequently the halftone values are
calculated. When the values thus obtained are drawn in a
diagram versus the corresponding film values the transfer
characteristic is obtained. Having used plate making this is a
print characteristic.

It is valid only for the particular combination of ink, paper,


printing pressure, blanket and plate for which it was deter-
mined. If the same job is printed on another press, with
different ink or on different paper, then the print characteris-
tic will be slightly different.

The illustration shows how characteristic 1 runs at an angle


of 45°. It represents the ideal case in which print and film
are optically identical, but which is unattainable under nor-

32
mal conditions. Characteristic 2 reproduces the halftone
values actually measured in print. The marked area between
the two lines represents the dot gain.

For determining the dot gain in print, the middle-tone range


is the most significant. The print characteristic shows that
here the halftone value shifts reach a maximum.
By means of characteristic 2 the screen film can be adjusted
in such a way that in print (with a normal dot gain) the
desired tone values are attained.

In practice, however, this can only partly be achieved.

Film

Print

Print Characteristic

Characteristic 2
Characteristic 1

DV = 1.50

Film

33
2.3 Relative print contrast

As an alternative to dot gain the relative print contrast


Krel.(%) is often determined, particularly to check the screen
in the three-quarter tone.

A print should have a contrast as high as possible.


This means that the solids should have a high ink density,
but the screen should still print open (optimum halftone
value difference). When the inking is increased and the ink
density of the dots rises, the contrast is increased. However,
the increase in ink feed is only practicable up to a certain
limit. Above that limit the dots tend to exhibit gain and,
especially in three-quarter tone, to fill in. This reduces the
portion of paper white, and the contrast decreases again.
If there is no measuring device available with a direct con-
trast display, the relative print contrast can be calculated or
determined on the basis of the FOGRA PMS. (The formulae
are given in Chapter 3.4.3).

If the contrast value deteriorates during a production run in


spite of constant ink value in solid DV, this may be a sign
that the blankets need washing.
If the solid density is correct, the contrast value can be used to
assess various factors which influence the print result such as

■ rolling and printing pressure,


■ blankets and underlays,
■ dampening,
■ printing inks and additives.

Since the contrast value, unlike the dot gain, depends to a


large extent on the solid density it is not suitable as a vari-
able for standardisation. This is why in the recent past its
importance has decreased significantly.

34
2.4 Colour balance / image build-up

As has been explained, colour hues are reproduced in four-


colour printing by different portions of cyan, magenta, yellow
and black. If their portions change, the resulting colour
changes. To avoid this, the colour portions for the desired
colour hue must be balanced correctly and reliably.

If only the black colour portion changes, the hue becomes


brighter or darker, a phenomenon we do not regard as dis-
turbing. The same is true when the chromatic colours all
change relative to their portions and in the same direction.
However, we react critically to shifts in the colour hue. Such
shifts occur if the individual colour components do not change
together, or, at worst, if they change in opposite directions.
Such impairments of the colour balance can be recognised most
clearly on gray balance fields; the colour balance therefore is
often termed gray balance.

The extent of the inevitable variations in each of the printing


inks during the printing process largely depends on the princi-
ple of image build-up chosen in pre-press.
In this connection, the print-relevant questions are:
- Which inks form the gray areas?
- Which technique is used to darken coloured image areas?
- How are shadows and image depth produced?
In short: What are the gray and achromatic portions composed
of, and which maximum percentage dot areas are the result?
Remember: Gray and achromatic values can either be produced
from cyan, magenta and yellow or with black printing ink.
A combination is also possible.

2.4.1 Chromatic composition

In chromatic composition, the achromatic values always consist


of portions of the chromatic printing inks cyan (C), magenta (M)
and yellow (Y), i.e. all gray image areas, all tertiary hues and
the shadow details contain the three chromatic printing inks.

35
Black (K) is only used to intensify image shadows and to
100% improve shadow details (skeleton black).

50% 70 % C 80 % M 90% Y 0%K 240 %

The brown colour shown in the illustration was built up i


chromatic colour structuring from 70 % cyan, 80 % magenta,
90 % yellow and 0 % black. All in all, surface covering amounts
0% to 240 %.
C M Y K
The effect of the colour portions is shown in the margin. The
chromatic colour composition of the brown consists of an
achromatic (gray) and a chromatic portion. With inks of the
100% European Colour Scale, 70 % cyan, approx. 58 % magenta, and
59 % yellow will neutralise and result in gray. Only the remain-
ing 22 % magenta and 31 % yellow form the light brown chro-
matic portion. With the gray portion added, the result will be
dark brown.
50%

Chromatic composition results in high dot percentages which


theoretically may be 400 %, yet in practice usually do not
exceed 375 %. These high dot percentages have a negative
effect on the ink trapping behaviour, on drying and on powder
0%
C M Y K consumption. Also, colour balance is difficult to maintain
during the print process.

2.4.2 Achromatic composition

In contrast to chromatic composition, in achromatic composi-


tion all achromatic contents of multi-colour printed pictures are
produced, in principle, with black printing ink. That is why
neutral hues only consist of black printing ink, and chromatic
hues as well as shadow details are also darkened with black. All
chromatic hues are the result of not more than two chromatic
printing inks plus black. This is why colour balance is easier to
maintain with achromatic composition.
With achromatic composition, the brown as shown in Chapter
2.4.1 theoretically consists of: 0 % C + 22 % M + 31 % Y + 70 % K.

36
100%

0%C 22 % M 31 % Y 70 % K 123 %

The figure shows that it is not possible to produce matching


50%
colours by simply replacing the CMY achromatic colour by
black. This is mainly due to inadequacies in the real printing
inks. Colour similarity can only be achieved with a changed por-
tion of the chromatic colours and a modification of the black
portion, e.g. to 62 % M, 80 % Y, and 67 % K. The achromatic
0%
composition corresponds to 100 % GCR (Chapter 2.4.6). C M Y K

2.4.3 Chromatic composition with under colour addition (UCA)


100%

In some cases, black printing ink will yield only insufficient


image depth in the darker areas of the gray axis. As a counter-
measure, this area and, to a lesser extent, the adjacent chro-
matic areas as well are intensified by adding an achromatic
50%
portion of C+M+Y. UCA („Under Colour Addition“) particularly
depends on the combination of substrate and printing ink. The
figure in the margin demonstrates under colour addition in the
neutral image depth.
0%
C M Y K
2.4.4 Chromatic composition with under colour removal (UCR)

With chromatic composition, the highest dot percentages will be


found in the areas of neutral three-quarter tones to black. This
disadvantage is countered by under colour removal (UCR). The 100%

portion of the achromatic composition made up of C+M+Y is


reduced in the neutral shadow areas and, to a lesser extent, in
the adjacent chromatic areas; the portion of black printing ink
is increased. In the example shown in the margin, the original
50%
dot percentage of 98 % cyan + 86 % magenta + 87 % yellow +
84 % black = 355 % is reduced to 68 % cyan + 56 % magenta +
57 % yellow + 96 % black = 277 %. This has a positive effect on
the ink trapping behaviour, on drying and on the shadow
balance. 0%
C M Y K

37
2.4.5 Chromatic composition with gray stabilization

It is difficult to maintain a balance in the printing process with


a chromatic composition of gray tones. Colour casts easily
occur. They are eliminated by means of gray tone stabilization.
Achromatic portions of C+M+Y are partly or completely re-
placed by corresponding portions of black along the total gray
axis and, to a lesser extent, in the adjacent chromatic areas as
well, i.e. not only at the darker end of the gray axis as in UCR.
In practice this is also called „long black“.

2.4.6 Chromatic composition with gray component replacement (GCR)


For gray component replacement (GCR), the portions of C+M+Y
neutralising into gray are replaced by the achromatic printing
100%
ink black both in neutral and chromatic image areas. GCR thus
makes it possible to create all intermediate steps between im-
ages formed with chromatic and achromatic composition in all
shadow areas, and is, therefore, not limited to the gray areas
50% as UCR, UCA or gray stabilization are. Gray component repla-
cement is sometimes also called complementary colour replace-
ment.

With GCR, the brown as shown in Chapters 2.4.1 and 2.4.2


0% could theoretically also be composed, e.g., of
C M Y K

50 % C 60 % M 70 % Y 20 % K 200 %

As with achromatic composition (Chapter 2.4.2), the same


colour can not, in practice, be obtained if only part of the CMY
achromatic colour is replaced by black and the portion of
chroma remains unchanged. For example, a similar colour is
achieved with 49 % C + 70 % M + 80 % Y + 30 % K.

38
2.4.7 Five-, six- and seven-colour printing

Advanced four-colour printing meets even high quality stan-


dards. Nevertheless, special sets of colour plates may be need-
ed with some originals and for highest quality requirements.
The reproducible range of colours can be expanded by using
special colours (besides the four primary colours). The follow-
ing illustration shows where the colour values measured for a
seven-colour print are located in the CIE chromaticity
diagram.

0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

The hexagon located within the diagram’s borders shows the


range of the process colours cyan, magenta and yellow (mea-
sured values). The dodecagon surrounding it indicates how the
range of colours can be enlarged by the additional colours
green (G), red (R) and blue (B).

39
2.5 Ink trapping and colour sequence

2.5.1 Ink trapping

Another variable influencing the reproduction of the colour


hue is the ink trapping characteristic. It indicates how well
an ink is accepted when printed onto another ink as com-
pared to when it is printed onto the printing stock.
A distinction has to be made between wet-on-dry and wet-
on-wet printing.

The term “wet-on-dry” printing is used when an ink is printed


directly onto the printing stock or another, dry ink. If, on the
other hand, an ink is superimposed on a wet colour, one
uses the term “wet-on-wet”. For multicolour presses, the
term “wet-on-wet” printing is generally used.

If the coverage is uniform and if the hue is located at the


correct coordinates, then one speaks of good ink trapping.

If, on the other hand, the desired hue can not be attained,
the ink trapping is faulty. This may be the case with all
mixed colours. As a consequence, the range of colours is
reduced and certain colour shadings can no longer be repro-
duced.

40
If the ink film thickness is correct and if the colour locations
of the primary colours cyan, magenta and yellow are situ-
ated at the correct reference locations, it may nevertheless
be the case that the reference locations of the mixed colours
red, green and blue cannot be attained due to faults in
superimposition during printing.

The following CIE chromaticity diagram demonstrates the


effects of a faulty ink trapping or an unfavorable colour
sequence on the print result. The white area illustrates the
extent of halftone value reduction caused by faulty ink trap-
ping.

0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

41
2.5.2 Colour sequence

The schematic illustration shows the results of three differ-


ent superimpositions of the colours cyan and magenta.

C
M C M + C =
M

M C M + C = C
M

C M C + M = M
C

In the first example a layer of magenta was printed on a


single-colour press as the first colour. Then a layer of cyan
was superimposed after drying (“wet-on-dry”). The ink film
thickness of both colours is identical. The ink film trapping
is good and the desired colour location has been reached.

The second example was produced on a multi-colour press.


First a film of magenta was printed on the dry paper (wet-
on-dry). Then a layer of cyan was printed onto the still wet
magenta ink (wet-on-wet). Whereas the magenta ink film
was accepted well by the paper, the ink trapping for cyan
was worse (due to the colour separation during superimpo-
sition in printing). The result is a red-cast blue.
In the third example the wet-on-wet printing method was
also used but with reversed colour sequence (cyan onto
magenta). The result is a blue-cast red.

42
In four-colour-print the colour sequence black-cyan-
magenta-yellow has been generally accepted as standard.
This colour sequence is also the basis for the adjustment of
colour consistency in printing ink manufacturing.

To reduce the effects of faulty ink trapping that might occur


in special cases, typon and printing plates should be
carefully checked before mounting. For solid fields, for
example, it might be advantageous to print the lighter form
before the more solid one.

In particular, this applies to the superimposition of screens


and solid ink films. The screen should first be printed on the
white paper and then the ink film onto it.

2.6 Print control strips

For controlling print quality on the basis of measured data,


print control strips are printed with the image. They are
available from various research institutes and suppliers.
However, only originals may be used, since deviations might
occur during copying onto a duplicating film that impair the
measurement results.

Print control strips are available for four- to eight-colour


presses. With print control strips for more than four colours
the number of halftone and slur patches is reduced in favor
of the solid and colour balance fields necessary for the con-
trol of the ink fountain zones.

All print control strips consist of several elements. In the


following, the most important patches of the Heidelberg CPC
colour measurement strip, the FOGRA and Brunner print
control strips, will be described.

43
2.6.1 Solid patches (fields)

B C M Y Solid patches enable the uniformity of the inking to be


checked. It is advisable to use one solid field per printing ink
spaced at the distance of the ink fountain zone width (32.5
mm for Heidelberg). This makes it possible to use solid fields
for the automatic colorimetric control of solids.

2.6.2 Overprint patches (fields)


MY CY CM
These elements are designed for the visual and densitomet-
ric assessment of the ink trapping performance.

2.6.3 Colour balance patches (fields)

CMY B
One has to distinguish between solid and halftone colour
balance fields. In solid patches, the superimposition of cyan,
magenta and yellow must result in an approximately neutral
black. For purposes of comparison, a black solid field is
printed next to the overprint field.

B CMY
Given correct ink film thickness, standardised colour
sequence and normal dot gain, the superimposition of cyan,
magenta and yellow produces an approximately neutral
gray. Different halftone values are used by manufacturers
for the typons of the various colours.

Colour balance patches are also used for the automatic gray
balance control of cyan, magenta and yellow.

Heidelberg: 70 % cyan 60 % magenta 60 % yellow


FOGRA: 28 % cyan 21 % magenta 19 % yellow
Brunner: 50 % cyan 41 % magenta 41 % yellow

44
2.6.4 Halftone patches (fields)

Depending on the manufacturer, halftone fields may contain


different typon halftone values.

From the measured data of the halftone and solid patches


the dot gain and print contrast are calculated.

Heidelberg Fogra Brunner


70 % 40 % and 80 % 50 % and 75 %

70 % 40 % 80 % 50 % 75 %

2.6.5 Slur/doubling patches (fields)

Line gratings of different screen angling allow the pressman


to visually and densitometrically check for slur or doubling
faults (see Chapter 2.2.1).

2.6.6 Plate exposure control patches (fields)

Plate exposure control fields are designed for visual moni-


toring of the plate exposure. The control elements shown
contain microlines and micro reverse lines as well as fields
with dots.

0,5% 99.5 0,5% 1% 6µ



1% 99%
2% 3% 11
2% 98%
13
3% 97% 11 16
4% 5%

45
Densitometry

3 Densitometry
3.1 Measuring principle of a reflection densitometer 48
3.2 The use of filters in densitometry 50
3.2.1 Colour filters and brightness filters 50
3.2.2 Polarisation filters 52
3.3 Measuring values in densitometry 53
3.4 Measurement 56
3.4.1 Zeroing on paper white 56
3.4.2 Solid density 56
3.4.3 Halftone density 56
3.4.4 Optically effective area coverage
(halftone value in print) 57
3.5 Evaluation 58
3.5.1 Halftone value in print 58
3.5.2 Dot gain 58
3.5.3 Contrast 58
3.5.4 Ink trapping 59
3.6 Standardisation in printing 60
3.7 Limits of densitometry 62

47
Transmission densitometer Densitometry is the cheapest and most widespread measur-
ing method in the field of repro work and printing.
Densitometers are used as hand-held instruments or in the
form of automatic measurement devices (scanning den-
sitometers).

There are two kinds of densitometers, used for different


purposes:

■ The transmission densitometer is used in repro work to


measure the blackening of the film (transparent
Reflection densitometer
substrata).
■ Reflection densitometers are used to measure printed
images (opaque substrata).

In the following, the working principles of reflection den-


sitometry will be described in more detail.

3.1 Measuring principle of a reflection densitometer

In reflection densitometry the ink to be measured is illumi-


nated by a light source. The light ray passes through the
transparent (glazing) ink layer and is partly absorbed.
The non-absorbed content of the light is largely scattered by
the printing stock. Part of this reflected light again passes
through the ink and is absorbed again. The remaining non-
absorbed light reaches a detector, which converts the light
into electricity. The result of the measurement with a reflec-
tion densitometer is given in density units.

In the measurement, lens systems are used to focus the


light. Polarisation filters serve to prevent differences in the
measured values obtained from a shining wet surface and
from the surface of a dry ink. Colour filters are inserted for
measurements of colours (see Chapter 3.2.1).

48
Colour filter
Colour filter
Colour filter
Polarisation filter
Polarisation filter
Paper
Lens system

The illustration explains this principle, taking a coloured ink


as an example. Ideally, the incident white light consists of
equal portions of red, green and blue. The printed colour
contains pigments which absorb the red portion and reflect
the green and blue portions, which is why we call it “cyan”.
Densitometers are intended for measurement within the
absorption range of each colour, where density and ink film
thickness closely correlate. In our example a red filter is
used which allows only red light to pass, whereas blue and
green are blocked.

The density of a given ink mainly depends on the pigmen-


tation, its concentration and its ink film thickness. For a
given ink the density is a measure of the ink film thickness,
yet it does not tell us anything about the hue.

49
3.2 The use of filters in densitometry

3.2.1 Colour filters and brightness filters

The colour filters in a densitometer are tuned to the absorp-


tion performance of cyan, magenta and yellow.

Common standards such as DIN 16 536 and ISO/ANSI 5/3


define the spectral transmission bands and the positions of
the transmission maxima accordingly. Of the narrow and
broadband colour filters listed there, referred to as status A
and T in ISO respectively, narrow band filters should be
used since the difference in measurement resulting from the
use of different brands of filters is smaller than in broad
band filters.

Colour filters must always be chosen complementary in


colour to the printing inks which are to be measured.
The colour black is measured with a visual filter tuned to the
spectral of brightness sensivity of the human eye.
Special colours are measured with the filter which returns
the highest measurement value.

Printing inks Filter colour


cyan red
magenta green
yellow blue

The following three illustrations show the reflexion curves


for cyan, magenta and yellow, together with the respective
colour filters according to DIN 16 536.

50
1.0 Cyan

0.5

0.0

1.0 Magenta

0.5

0.0

1.0 Yellow

0.5

0.0

51
3.2.2 Polarisation filters

Densitometers can be used to measure both dry and wet


printing inks. Wet colours have a smooth, shining surface.

During the drying process, the ink adapts to the irregular


structure of the paper surface, and the reflection effect
decreases. If a given ink is measured first in wet and then in
dry condition, different readings will result.

In order to eliminate this effect, two crossed linear polari-


sation filters are inserted in the path of the rays. Polarisation
filters allow the light of only one particular vibration direc-
tion to pass, while blocking all light waves which are
vibrating in other directions. Part of the light rays polarised
by the first polarisation filter are reflected by the ink surface
specularly, i.e. without altering their direction of vibration.
The second polarisation filter is aligned at an angle of 90° to
the first so that the reflected light waves are inhibited from
passing.

Light rays, however, which penetrate into the ink film and
are reflected either by the ink or by the printing stock, lose
their original polarisation.

They are therefore able to pass through the second polari-


sation filter and reach the detector.

By thus blocking the portions of light reflected by the wet


colour surface, approximately equal readings for wet and
dry inks are obtained.

Paper Due to the absorption by the polarisation filters less light


reaches the detector; the readings obtained with such
Direction of scattering devices are therefore generally lower than measurements
Direction of vibration made with other instruments.

52
3.3 Measuring values in densitometry

Densitometers display their readings for the ink density D as


a logarithmic number. It is the logarithmic ratio of the
absorbed light for a “reference white” to that obtained from
the measured ink film. In practice, the ink density reading is
mostly referred to as the “density”.

The ink density value is calculated using the following formula:


1
D = lg
β

The reflectance factor β is calculated as follows:

LeP
β=
LeW

LeW LeP
100 %
50 %

LeP 50 %
β= = = 0.5
LeW 100 %

where LeP is the light reflectance of the printing ink and


LeW the light reflectance of the reference white.

The reflectance factor β gives the ratio between the light


reflectance from a measuring sample (printing ink) and from
a “white” (reference value).

With the β – value calculated above the ink density is:

1 1
D = lg = lg = lg 2 = 0.30
β 0.5

53
There is a close correlation between ink film thickness and
ink density. The illustration shows that with the ink film
thickness increasing, light reflectance decreases and the ink
density value increases.

90 %

β = 0.9 D = 0.05

50 %

β = 0.5 D = 0.30

10 %

β = 0.1 D = 1.00

1%

β = 0.01 D = 2.00

0.1 %

β = 0.001 D = 3.00

0.1 %

β = 0.001 D = 3.00

Formulas for calculating the ink density values are given on


page 53.

54
The diagram illustrates the correlation between ink film
thickness and ink density for the four process colours in
offset printing.
Density

Black
2.5

Cyan
Magenta
2.0 Yellow

1.5

1.0

0.5

Ink film thickness


0.0

0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 m

The vertical line marks the ink film thickness range of about
1 µm customarily used in offset printing. The diagram also
shows that the density curves do not start to flatten off until
significantly higher ink film thicknesses are reached.
From these ink film thicknesses upwards there is hardly any
further increase in the ink density; even if the measurement
were performed in a full ink container, the density value
would not be higher. However, these ink film thicknesses
are no longer relevant for offset printing.

55
3.4 Measurement

3.4.1 Zeroing on paper white

Before measurement is started, densitometers must be cali-


brated to zero against the paper white (reference white) of
the printing stock in order to eliminate the influences of
paper colouring and surface characteristics on the evalua-
tion of the printed ink film thickness.

For this purpose, the density of the paper white in relation


to “absolute white” is measured, and this figure is set to zero
(reading D = 0.00).

3.4.2 Solid density

The readings of a solid area, are referred to as solid density


(DV). It is measured on a print control strip, which is printed
on the sheet at right angles to the print direction.
Besides other control elements the print control strip con-
tains solid fields for all four process colours and, if
necessary, for additional colours.

The solid density value allows a regular ink film thickness


to be checked and maintained (within a certain tolerance)
throughout the whole sheet width and print-run.

3.4.3 Halftone density

The halftone density is measured in the halftone patches of


the print control strip. In the measurement spot of three to
four millimeters, a combination of dots and paper white is
included, similar to that seen by the human eye.

The measurement value is the ink density in halftone (DR). The


larger the ratio of the area of dots to the total area on a meas-
ured surface and the higher the ink film thickness of a given
printing ink, the higher is the measured halftone density value.

56
3.4.4 Optically effective area coverage (halftone value in print)

When screens are measured with a densitometer, it is not


the geometrical area coverage, i.e. the area ratio between
dots and paper white on the measuring spot, but the “opti-
cally effective area coverage” which is measured.

The difference between geometric and optically effective


area coverage is due to the fact that both in visual observa-
tion and in densitometric measurements, part of the arriving
light penetrates into the paper between the dots at the
unprinted points, but is trapped under the dots during
reflection and thus absorbed.

Paper

This effect is called “light gathering”. It causes the dots to


appear optically larger than they are in reality. The optically
effective area coverage is composed of the geometric area
coverage plus the optical gain of the area.

57
3.5 Evaluation

From the measurement values of solid and halftone densi-


ties halftone value, dot gain and contrast can be calculated.
First, however, all measuring devices must be calibrated to
zero against the paper white.

3.5.1 Halftone value in print

Given the DV and DR readings, the halftone value in print FD


can be calculated using the Murray-Davies formula.

1–10–DR
FD (%) = · 100
1–10–DV

3.5.2 Dot gain

The dot gain Z(%) is obtained from the difference between


the measured halftone value in print FD and the known
halftone value in film FF.

Z (%) = FD–FF

3.5.3 Relative print contrast

The relative print contrast is also calculated from the read-


ings of the solid ink density DV and the screen ink density
DR. The DR value here is best measured in the three-quarter
tone.

DV – DR
Krel.(%) = · 100
DV

58
3.5.4 Ink trapping

The ink trapping is calculated from the solid density values for
every individual colour in the solid fields, for all two-colour
superimpositions and for the three-colour superimposition in
the solid superimposition fields of the print control strip in
accordance with the colour sequence involved.

The ink trapping calculated with the following formulae


indicates which percentage of an ink is superimposed onto
another. The value is given relative to that of an isolated ink
printed on the paper whose trapping is set to 100 %.

3.5.4.1 Two-colour superimposition

D1+2 – D1
FA2 % = · 100
1 D2

where
D1+2 is the ink density for the superimposition of both
colours,
D1 is the ink density of the colour printed first and
D2 is the ink density of the colour printed last.

N.B.: All ink densities must be measured with a filter


which is complementary to the second colour.

3.5.4.2 Three-colour superimposition

D1+ 2 + 3 – D1 + 2
FA3 (%) = · 100
2 D3
1

where
D1+2+3 is the ink density for the superimposition of all
the three colours and
D3 is the ink density of the colour printed last.

N.B.: All ink densities have to be measured with a filter


which is complementary to the third colour.

59
The given formulae are also used in the Heidelberg CPC
Quality Control. In addition, there are other methods of
calculating the ink trapping. All these methods are contro-
versial and, for this reason the values obtained should not
be interpreted too stringently. However, for a comparison
from run to run, and especially within the same run, they
are in fact meaningful. The higher the FA value, the better is
the ink trapping performance.

3.6 Standardisation in printing

In offset printing there are many steps between the typon


and the final print product e.g. reproduction (the making of
progressives), proof, plate exposure and print runs.
In each of these processing steps the size of the elements of
the image changes: halftone dots become larger or smaller,
lines become thinner or thicker.

The typical performance for each of these process steps can


be described by transfer characteristics, the most common
of which are the plate exposure characteristic and the print
characteristic.

The whole reproduction process aims at making the print


look like the typon. At the pre-print phase all the transfer
characteristics must be known. It is only then that variations
of the elements of the printed image that result from the
characteristics of the process can be compensated.
For reasons of economic efficiency, however, this is only
possible if the number of transfer characteristics is low.

60
Standardisation in printing therefore aims at defining only a
small number of transfer characteristics along with their
tolerances in order to obtain low-cost and high-quality
repros without having to take into account the properties of
individual plate-exposure devices or printing presses.

All process steps must aim at this goal, and their constancy
must be continuously monitored. Print control strips, plate
exposure control fields and, in particular, colorimeters at the
printing press are valuable tools in achieving this goal.

3.6.1 Standardisation systems


There are various standardisation systems. Yet all of them
aim at the same goal: producing cost-effective prints of con-
stant high quality.

Instructions for standardisation in printing are available


from various research institutes and suppliers. As an exam-
ple, the reader is referred to the standardisation guidelines
compiled by the FOGRA, the German Research Society for
Printing and Reproduction Technology, on behalf of the
Bundesverband Druck BVD (Association of the German
Printing Industry).

This concept is described in great detail in the illustrated


publication “Manual for Standardisation of the Offset Print-
ing Process – Instructions for “Platemaking and Printing”.
This publication (in an A 4 folder) and a video cassette with
the same title are available from the Bundesverband Druck
e. V. in Wiesbaden in English and German.

61
3.7 Limits of densitometry

Like the colour separation technique, densitometers work


with filters tuned to the four process colours. They provide a
relative value for the ink film thickness, i.e. they do not
measure the optical appearance of the colour.

x = suited for process colours


• = suited for special colours
( ) = partially suited Densitometer Colour Measurement Unit
Tristimulus Spectral
Ink formulating •

Ink setting (adjusting)


• on the basis of standards x (•) x • x •
• on the basis of proof control strips x (•) x • x •
• on the basis of key numbers (x) (•) x •
• on the basis of proof x • x •
• on the basis of random pattern x • x •
• on the basis of image data (repro) (x) (•) x •
• identifying suitable ink (x) (•) x •

Colour matching (comparing) x • x •

Controlling production run


• on the basis of solid patch x (•) x • x •
• on the basis of monochrome halftone-patch x (•) x • x •
• on the basis of multicolor halftone-patch (x) x • x •
• in the image x • x •
• recognizing ink spoilings x • x •
• recognizing changes in the printing stock x • x •

Measurement
• solid density x (•) (x) (•) x •
• dot gain x (•) (x) (•) x •
• ink trapping (relative) x (•) (x) (•) x •
• ink trapping (absolute) x • x •
• metameric index (x) (•) x •
• sensational x • x •

62
This fact sets certain limits to their application. The table
lists the typical fields of application compared to the tristim-
ulus colorimeter and spectrophotometers.

One essential disadvantage of densitometry is that the same


colour densities do not necessarily lead to the same optical
impression. This is the case when the colour substances to
be compared differ from each other. Therefore setpoint
values can not be taken from proofs or other samples.

The restriction to the three colour filters for red, green and
blue is of similar importance. When colour sets are com-
posed of more than the four process colours, the measuring
of the additional colours becomes problematic. In most cases
there are no appropriate filters for the additional colours, as
a result of which the values measured for ink density are too
low and those for dot gain are incorrect.

The use of densitometers is also critical for colour control on


the basis of multicolour halftone patches such as gray
balance patches. If a gray balance patch is measured with
the three-colour filters the resulting ink density values are
different than the values that result when each of the colours
is measured by itself. This is because each of the three print-
ing inks contributes to all ink densities. The reason for this
is that the process colours are not perfect two-third inks and
thus also absorb light from other spectral ranges.

Densitometers are useful in monitoring the print-run of a


four-colour print. In all other cases densitometers are of
limited use.

63
The following two examples illustrate how additional colours
are measured with a densitometer.
1.0

0.5

0.0
Colour sample Pantone Warm Gray 1

The hue (light beige) shown here – has a relatively high


reflectance, slightly decreasing in the blue range
(380 to 500 nm). Accordingly, the highest density value
(0.27) is measured with a blue filter. This low value cannot
be altered easily since changes in ink film thickness only
lead to insignificant shifts in the density. In practice light
pastel colours are therefore assessed visually on the basis of
an OK-sheet and corrected manually.

64
1.0

0.5

0.0
Colour sample HKS 8

1.0

0.5

0.0

Colour sample HKS 65

The additional colours HKS 8 and HKS 65 shown in the


second example have completely different hues as can be
seen from their reflectance curves. For both colours the
absorption within the blue range (380 to 500 nm) is greatest.
As a consequence, the highest densities (1.60 for either
colour) are measured by the blue filter. Equal density values
measured by the same filter thus do not necessarily mean
that the hues are equal!

The appearance of a colour can thus only be evaluated


colorimetrically.

65
Colorimetrics

4 Colorimetrics
4.1 Measuring colour 68
4.2 Tristimulus values/white reference 70
4.3 Standard illuminants 70
4.4 Standard observer/colour matching functions 72
4.5 Evaluation with a spectrophotometer 74
4.6 Colour difference ∆E 76
4.6.1 CIELAB 79
4.6.2 CIELUV 82
4.6.3 CIELCH 83
4.6.4 CMC 84
4.7 Munsell 86
4.8 The tristimulus method 87
4.9 Spectral colour measurement 88
4.10 The measuring principle of the Heidelberg
CPC 21 spectral quality control 90
4.11 Proof and colour control strips 91
4.11.1 Proof control strips 91
4.11.2 Colour control strips 92
4.12 Ink control with Heidelberg 93
4.12.1 Colorimetric control by gray fields 93
4.12.2 Colorimetric control by solid fields 95
4.12.3 Densitometric control by solid fields 97
4.13 Advantages of colorimetrics for offset printing 98

67
As described in the chapter “Systems of colour classifi-
cation”, three numbers are needed to unambiguously define
a colour. Colorimetrics describes how these figures are
determined and how they relate to each other.
One prerequisite is, however, that colours are measurable.
Thus colour measuring and colorimetrics are directly
connected with each other.

4.1 Measuring colour

Colours are measured with tristimulus colorimeters or


spectrophotometers. Their function is described in Chapters
4.8 and 4.9.
In principle, the construction of colour measuring devices
follows the visual and sensoric model of the human eye (see
illustration).

The ink (sample) is illuminated by a light source (radiation).


Part of the light is absorbed by the sample, the rest is reflec-
ted. The reflected light is captured by the human eye. There
the red, green and blue sensitive cones (visual receptors) are
stimulated. Via the optic nerve, this stimulation will trigger
off the perception of colour in our brain.

This natural process is imitated in the measuring device.


In the measuring process, the light is sent onto the printed
sample. The reflected light passes through a lens system and
to a sensor, which measures the intensity of the incident
light for each colour and transmits the measured readings to
a computer. There they are weighted with functions that
imitate the weighting functions of the three types of sensitive
cones in the human eye, and which have been defined by
the CIE for the standard observer. The result is the tristim-
ulus values X, Y and Z. These are finally converted into
chromaticity coordinates or coordinates of other colour
spaces (such as CIELAB or CIELUV).

68
light source

radiation

measuring
man
device

sample

sp
n
io

ec
ct

tra
le
ef

lr
lr

ef
tra

le
ct
ec

io
sp

eye optics with


receiver

visual receptors colour matching


functions of the
blue green red standard observer

stimulation tristimulus values

colour sensation colour coordinates

69
4.2 Tristimulus values/white reference

In the measuring of colours, the identification of tristimulus


values from measured reflections and emissions requires
standardised conditions. Most of them have been laid down
by the manufacturer of the equipment and have been taken
care of in such a way that the user need not pay further
attention to them. In the measuring of body colours,
however, three factors are usually variable and must be
adjusted by the user: the white reference, the type of light
and the observer.

Normally, colorimetric values are determined relative to


“absolute white”. The calibration is thus set to the cali-
bration standard of the measuring unit, which is in turn
calibrated against a theoretical absolute white. In contrast to
densitometry, the paper is used as a reference only in excep-
tional cases.

4.3 Standard illuminants

Without light there is no colour. But this also means that the
type of light influences our colour perception. The colour of
light is determined by its spectral composition.

In natural sunlight, the weather as well as the season and


time of day influence the spectral composition. Photogra-
phers and film directors often have to wait a long time until
the lighting conditions are the way they want them to be.

Likewise, there are differences in the spectral composition of


artificial lamp light. Some lamps produce reddish light
whereas others emit a greenish or bluish light.

Spectral reflection and consequently colour perception


change depending on the light conditions. Tristimulus values
must, therefore, be based on standard light.

70
In standardisation, the intensity distribution has been laid
down for different types of light in the range between 380
and 780 nm (at intervals of 5 nm). The illustration shows the
spectral distributions for the standard illuminants A, C, D50
and D65.

The C, D50 and D65 standard illuminants are similar to aver-


age daylight with a peak radiation intensity in the blue area.
The illustration shows the composition of the type D65 illu-
minant. An A standard illuminant has a peak intensity in the
red area; it thus appears reddish (evening light and electric
light).

71
4.4 Standard observer/colour matching functions

Each individual has three colour matching functions to


evaluate red, green and blue. In the case of persons with
normal chromatic vision, they will be almost identical.
Thus colours are perceived differently only in boundary
areas. For example, what one individual still perceives as a
bluish green, another will see as a greenish blue.

That is why it was necessary to define, for colorimetric


purposes, an individual with average visual perception, i.e.
the “standard observer”. A comprehensive series of tests
with a large number of persons with normal chromatic vision
was carried out in 1931. On the basis of these tests, the
colour matching functions x, y, and z were defined and laid
down as binding by the CIE both in national and inter-
national standards such as DIN 5033 and ISO/DC 12 647.

72
The study was carried out for an observer angle of 2°.
The observer angle in the sense of the standards of colori-
metrics is the visual angle at which a colour area is viewed
(see illustration). For example, if an area with a diameter of
3.5 cm is viewed at a distance of 1 m, the visual angle will
be exactly 2°.

In 1964, the same test was repeated for an observer angle of


10°, and the results were likewise laid down in a supple-
mentary standard. Hence the “standard observer 1964”
came into being.

1m

^ 3.5 cm
2° =
10° ^
= 17.5 cm

73
4.5 Evaluation with a spectrophotometer

The standard colour values are calculated from the radiation


function of the illuminant S(λ), the measured degree of spec-
tral reflection of the sample (λ) as well as the colour
matching functions x (λ), y (λ) and z (λ) of the standard
observer.

The lambda in brackets (λ) shows that the calculation


depends on the wavelength λ of the light (e.g. in a wave-
length range between 400 and 700 nm at intervals of 5 nm).
In the first step of the calculations, the values of the radia-
tion function of the standard illuminant S(λ) are multiplied
by the measured degrees of reflection β(λ) of the sample for
each wavelength λ (i.e. for each spectral colour of a specific
type of light). The result is a new curve, the colour stimulus
function ϕ(λ).

In a second step the values of the colour stimulus function


are multiplied by the colour matching functions x (λ), y (λ)
and z (λ). This results in three new curves.

Finally, by integrating and multiplying with a normalisation


factor, the tristimulus values X, Y and Z are calculated from
the areas under these curves by integration, which makes it
possible to exactly describe the measured colour.

74
Illuminant

times

Reflection

is

Colour stimulus
function

times

Colour
matching
function

times

Integration and
normalisation

is
Tristimulus
values

75
4.6 Colour difference ∆E

The colour difference is a measure of the distance between


two colour locations in the colour space (e.g. between origi-
nal and printed sheet).

In the chapter “Systems of colour classification”, the CIE


colour space was explained. But this colour space has one
major disadvantage: Not for all colours does the human eye
perceive colour location differences of the same value as
being identical.

MacAdam, an American, studied this fact in a long test


series, analyzing and illustrating the results. The illustration
shows the so-called MacAdam ellipses in tenfold enlarge-
ment. Since the CIE colour space is three-dimensional, the
ellipses are really ellipsoids, i.e. ellipse-shaped three-dimen-

0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

76
sional bodies. The size of the ellipsoids is a measure for the
perception threshold of colour deviations (each viewed from
the center of the ellipsoid and for the individual hue).

This system is therefore of no practical use in the evaluation


of colour differences, since it implies that the acceptable
tolerances are different for each hue. For reliable and
powerful calculations of colour differences, a colour space is
needed in which colour differences that are perceived as
being identical have the same numerical values. CIELAB and
CIELUV are two such systems; they were developed by
mathematical transformation from the CIE colour space.

Through this transformation, the MacAdam ellipsoids of


varying size were mapped on spheres of almost identical
size. In this way, the human eye perceives identical colour
differences for all colours as almost identical.

In 1976 the CIELAB and CIELUV colour spaces, the most


commonly used in the printing industry, were standardised
on an international basis.

77
0.8

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7

The illustration shows the location of the a*- and b*-axes of


the CIELAB colour space in the x-y colour table.

Other colour spaces such as the CMC system and the


Munsell colour space, are also used in the U.S.A.

78
L*
4.6.1 CIELAB

100
The CIELAB colour space is most frequently used for
measuring body colours (printing inks), for example, in
preparing ink formulae or for quality control in 80

printing. Colour tone and colour saturation are drawn


on the a* und b*axes. The a*-axis runs from –a*
60
(green) to +a* (red), the b* axis from –b* (blue) to +b*
(yellow). The lightness axis L* runs from 0 (black, at
b*
the bottom) to 100 (white, at the top).
40

The illustration shows the CIELAB colour space for 20


body colours. Since it is the result of a transforma-
–a* 0
a*
tion, its shape is different from that of the CIE colour –100 100
space. Likewise, the shape of the individual –100

lightness levels changes with L*. –b*

In the illustration, a cross section through the CIELAB colour


space is shown for body colours at a lightness level of
L* = 50. The scaled down green area and the enlarged blue
area can clearly be seen.

79
The colour differences are White
calculated using the
following formula:
∆L* = L*act – L*ref Yellow
∆a* = a*act – a*ref
∆b* = b*act – b*ref Green
∆E*ab = √ ∆L*2 + ∆a*2 + ∆b*2 Red

Blue

Black

For the user in practice, a schematic illustration is especially


handy.

Example: pre-set measured loca-


reference tion of colours
L* 75.3 70.0
a* 51.2 55.0
b* 48.4 54.0

L*= 75.3 means that it is a bright colour the location of


which is between yellow and red with a* = 51.2 and
b* = 48.4. The present example is therefore a bright yellow-
red or orange.

Result: The pre-set reference location of the colour and


the measured location of the colour differ.

80
White Results of the calculation:
∆L* = 75.3 – 70.0 = 5.3
∆a* = 51.2 – 55.0 = – 3.8
∆b* = 48.4 – 54.0 = – 5.6
actual ∆E*ab = √ 5.32 +(–3.8)2 +(–5.6)2 = 8.6
value
set value

In accordance with their perceptibility, the colour location


differences can be classified as follows:

∆E between 0 and 1 in general, this deviation cannot


be perceived.

∆E between 1 and 2 very small deviation; only per-


ceivable by an experienced eye.

∆E between 2 and 3.5 medium deviation; perceivable


even by an unexperienced eye.
∆E between 3.5 and 5 large deviation
∆E exceeding 5 massive deviation

Since the transformation used is not linear, the regularities


of the CIE colour space cannot readily be applied to the
CIELAB colour space. One argument in favor of its use is its
worldwide application.

81
4.6.2 CIELUV

L The CIELUV colour space was also derived through transfor-


*
mation from the CIE colour space but by using other
100 formulae than for the former. The three coordinate axes
are denoted by L*, u* and v*.
Since the CIELUV and CIELAB colour spaces are
80
the result of different transformations, they also
differ in shape. Both are used for body colours (see
60 illustration).
v*

40

20

–u* u*
–100 0 100
–100
–v*

The illustration shows a cross section through the CIELUV


colour space for body colours at a lightness of L* = 50 (see
also Chapter 4.6.1). The green area in the CIELUV colour
space is located closer to the center than in the CIELAB
colour space; furthermore, the blue area is larger.

82
The CIELUV colour space is often used for the evaluation of
colours on colour monitors (e.g. on scanners or computers).
Its advantage lies in the linearity of transformation so that
all the regularities of the CIE colour space remain unchanged.
(This is not the case with the CIELAB colour space.)

4.6.3 CIELCH

The term CIELCH is used when the polar coordinates C


(distance from the center) and h (angle) are used instead of
the Cartesian coordinates a, b or u, v in the CIELAB or
CIELUV colour space. CIELCH is thus not an additional
colour space.

The lightness L* remains unchanged.

The chroma C*ab is calculated by C*ab = √a*2 + b*2.

The hue angle h*ab is calculated from = arctan ( )


b*
a*
.

For CIELUV, the calculation is the same.

Here a schematic representation with the same measured


colour location as in Chapter 4.6.1.

Actual colour location: L* = 75.3


C* = 70.5
h* = 43.4°

83
4.6.4 CMC

CMC, an evaluation of the colour location differences based


on the CIELAB colour space, was developed in Great Britain
in 1988 by The Colour Measurement Committee of the
Society of Dyers and Colourists (CMC). It does not describe
the perception of colour deviations (as CIELAB or CIELUV
do), but their acceptance by the observer.

In general, colour deviations near the lightness axis are


perceived to be much more disturbing than those in satu-
rated colours. Likewise, deviations in chroma (saturation)
are more readily tolerated than in the hue angle.

The illustration shows the principle underlying the CMC


evaluation of colour location differences in the CIELAB
colour space. Each ellipse shows the locations with constant
colour location differences in accordance with the CMC
formula with respect to the centre of the circle (reference
colour location). It can be clearly seen that the ellipses (toler-
ance ranges in the CMC colour space) are smaller in the
achromatic area than in the region of higher saturation.
In addition their shape is such that the admissible deviations
in the hue angle are smaller than in the chroma (saturation).
The ellipses also make it possible to individually adjust the
evaluation of deviations in lightness and hue. This adjust-
ment is made by means of the two weighting factors l and c.
(l is the lightness weighting factor; the weighting factor c for
the hue is as a rule equal to 1.) The textile industry often
operates with weighting factor ratio of l : c = 2 : 1, which
means that deviations in lightness will be twice as accept-
able as deviations in colour hue.

84
This ratio can be adapted to the needs of the application in
question. As a consequence, the values for colour location
differences are significant and comparable only in connec-
tion with the weighting factors.

∆ Lightness

∆ Lightness
∆ Croma
∆H
ue
∆ Croma
∆H
ue

85
V 4.7 Munsell

C Munsell developed a system of colour classification with


equidistant location differences as far back as 1905. In this
system, the colours are arranged according to hue, brightness
and chroma. The basic hues are red, yellow, green, blue and
H
purple. The system was published in 1915 as the “Munsell Book
of Colour” for 40 hues, light type C and brilliant and
matt specimens.

The five basic colour hues were subdivided into 100 hues of
even numbers each having 16 chroma and 10 brightness
levels. The illustration shows a cross section of the colour body
for 40 hues. The result is an irregular colour body since for
some colours and lightness values not all fields are covered.

5Y 2,5Y 10Y V
7,5Y R 7,5
YR 100
10Y 16 5Y
GY R2
2,5 14
,5
YR
Y 90
5G
10
Y

12
5G

80
7,

7,5
GY

10
R
10

8
70
5R
G
2,5

6
2,5R
5G

4 60
10RP 7,5RP 5RP 2
10G 7,5G

2
50
2
40
2,5BG

4
6
,5R

30
BG

8
5
BG

10

20
P

10
7,5

7,
BG

5P

12
10

5B
5P 10
2, 14 2,5
5B P
10P
B7,5
PB 5PB
16
B 7
,5B 0
2,5PB 10

The Munsell coordinates cannot be converted into CIE


coordinates.

Further systems of colour classification are the DIN colour card


(DIN 6164), the Natural Colour System (NCS), the OSA system
(of the Optical Society of America) and the RAL Design-System
(RAL-DS).

86
4.8 Tristimulus method

The construction of tristimulus colorimeters is similar to


that of densitometers. Instead of the three colour filters red,
green and blue and the visual filter, combinations of filters
are used which imitate the three colour matching functions
x, y and z.

Tristimulus colorimeters, however, have a lower absolute


measuring precision than spectrophotometers since, as a
rule, neither can the colour matching functions be imitated
exactly nor is the required standard illuminant available.
They are suited, however, for determining colour differences
since in this case the absolute values do not necessarily have
to be precise.

In addition, tristimulus devices are considerably cheaper


than spectrophotometers.

The measuring field is illuminated with a lamp whose spec-


tral composition is close to that of a standard illuminant.
In our example, cyan is to be measured.

The spectral reflection is measured by means of the three


different filter combinations, and the tristimulus value X is
measured behind filter (red), the tristimulus value Y behind
filter (green) and the tristimulus value Z behind filter (blue).

After the measurement the tristimulus values can be conver-


ted into a colour space (CIELAB or CIELUV) in which colour
differences are perceived to be equidistant.

87
Paper

Measurement principle of the three-range


photometer

4.9 Spectral colour measurement

In the spectral measuring process the total visible spectrum


from 380 to 780 nm is measured. The light reflected from a
printing ink is separated into its spectral components by
means of a diffraction grate and measured by an array of
sensors.

Depending on the required accuracy, the identity of the


incoming light is measured in steps of one, five or ten nano-
meters. The tristimulus values X, Y and Z are calculated
from the measured reflections. For this, the colour matching

88
functions, are stored in the computer. Since these functions
need not be simulated by filters, the absolute accuracy of
spectrophotometers is very high. However, they are more
expensive than tristimulus colorimeters.

Apart from the high absolute accuracy, one major advantage


of spectral colour measuring is the fact that spectrophotome-
ters can read out the tristimulus values for practically all
standardised types of light and observers, if their values are
stored in the computer. Furthermore, they can calculate
colour densities for all filter standards.

So far spectral measuring has been applied most consist-


ently in the ink industry.

In ink grinding, ink manufacturers have to comply strictly


with given targets. This is very important in the case of
standardised inks (Euroscale), but also in the case of HKS
inks and all special grindings. In these cases, the specimen
is measured with a spectrophotometer, and the mixture
ratio for the printing ink is calculated on a personal com-
puter with an ink program.

Previously it was not possible to make optimum use of spec-


trophotometers in printing shops. They were expensive and
cumbersome, and it was not possible to use them directly for
process colours. They were therefore only used for the indi-
vidual measuring of special inks and the testing of materials
(such as printing stocks and inks). They were unimportant
for quality control in printing.

89
4.10 The measuring principle of the Heidelberg CPC
spectral quality control

At DRUPA 1990, Heidelberg was the first and only


manufacturer to present a spectral measuring unit for offset
printing directly linked with the offset printing machines via
the CPC 1 automatic remote colour control: the measuring
unit CPC 21 and, since IPEX 98, the CPC 24 spectral image
measurement unit.

During the measuring process, a measuring head scans the


print control strip or the image, making a spectral
measurement of all control elements. Alternatively, the
standard illuminants A, C, D50 or D65 and the standard
observers 2° and 10° can be used. The measuring principle
of a spectrophotometer is illustrated in the diagram below.

First, the illuminant is directed to the printed probe via ring


catoptrics at an incidence angle of 45°. The reflected light at

Printing units

CPC

Light source
Computer

Spectral remission

Diodes

Ring catoptrics
Deflection mirror
Light guide

Printed Diffraction grating


sample
Paper

90
an angle of 0° is directed via a deflection mirror and a fiber-
optical light guide from the measuring head to the
spectrophotometer. There it is split into its spectral colours
by means of a diffraction grating which has an effect similar
to that of a prism.

Photodiodes measure the radiation distribution in the entire


visible spectrum (between 380 and 730 nm) and send the
results to a computer.
There the measured colour values are evaluated
colorimetrically; the result is given in the tristim-ulus values
X, Y and Z and the chromaticity coordinates x, y and Y.

After the measured values have been compared to the


previously set reference values (allowing for the pre-set
tolerance DE), the required modifications are transmitted via
CPC 1 to the ink ducts of the printing units, where they are
realised immediately.

4.11 Proof and colour control strips

4.11.1 Proof control strips

Off-press tonal proofs are increasingly being used instead of


press proofs. The reason is that an off-press tonal proof is
cheaper and can be produced more rapidly than a press
proof.
There are different proofing methods, all of which operate
without offset printing ink. Furthermore, the colouring
materials of the proofs (i.e. the toners) and offset printing
inks differ in their composition.

Heidelberg has developed a special proof control strip (see


illustration).

Black Cyan Magenta Yellow

CMY CMY 70% B 70% C 70% M 70% Y CM CY MY

© 1990 HEIDELBERG CPC Proof

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It has solid patches of the colours black, cyan, magenta and
yellow, plus one halftone patch with 70% area coverage per
colour, ink trapping elements and a gray field consisting of
70% cyan, 60% magenta and 60% yellow. In addition there
is an interface element for the automatic reading of
reference values into CPC 21.

4.11.2 Colour control strips

The colour control strip for spectral measuring has also


been developed by Heidelberg and contains (except for the
interface element) the same measuring elements as the
proof strip. Additionally, exposure measuring elements for
standardised plate exposure are available.

Heidelberg offers four different colour control strips:


The print control strip type 4 GS (Gray field and Solid
control) for four printing inks, print control strip type 6GS
and 6 GS for five and six printing inks and the print control
strip type 8 GS for seven and eight printing inks.

The data of these colour control strips and the print control
strips of the older densitometric measuring unit CPC 2-01
are stored in CPC 21 and CPC 24.

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4.12 Ink control with Heidelberg

Heidelberg offers four types of ink control:

■ colorimetric control on the basis of the gray field,


■ colorimetric control on the basis of solid or
halftone fields,
■ densitometric control on the basis of solid or
halftone fields (CPC 21 only),
■ colorimetric control in the image (CPC 24 only).

4.12.1 Colorimetric control by gray fields

As mentioned in Chapter 2.4, colour balance is a decisive


criterion for the optical impression of a printed image.
Faults in the colour balance are especially obvious in gray
fields. It therefore seems sensible to use gray fields for
measurement-based tuning as well as for monitoring and
controlling the print run stability.

Colorimetrics is ideally suited for this. The inks cyan,


magenta and yellow should therefore be controlled
colorimetrically on the basis of gray fields (if possible with
three-quarter tone patches). As reference values, both in-
house standards and values from proof control strips may
be used.

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The illustration shows a monitor display of CPC 21. The
location of the reference colour is shown in the a-b plane at
the upper left. In our example it is located in the center, i.e.
on the gray axis. The center of the illustration shows an
enlargement around the reference colour location. The three
circles mark the boundaries of the three ∆E-tolerance
classes close, medium and wide. The lightness axis is
situated near the right border of the screen, also with
respect to the reference colour location. Here, too, the three
tolerances are marked.

Each cross marks a reading. In the example shown, the


measured colour locations of the colour zones deviate
towards yellow-green and brighter.

If the deviations are larger than the allowed ∆E-tolerance,


the processing unit will automatically compute the necessary
corrections for cyan, magenta and yellow. In addition to the
spectral readings of the gray field, those of the single colour
solid patches and halftone patches of cyan, magenta and
yellow as well as the spectral readings of solid
superimposition patches are evaluated. In this way, all

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relevant factors involved are taken into consideration.
Corrections in the press will automatically be made via the
CPC 1 press control unit.

4.12.2 Colorimetric control by solid fields

Colorimetric solid control is generally preferred for black


and for special colours. Black primarily has an effect on
brightness. Since the human eye tends to tolerate deviations
in brightness more readily than chroma deviations, black
can be controlled on the basis of solid fields. Experience has
shown that the influence of black on the colour balance is
thus sufficiently accounted for.

Additional colours are mostly printed as isolated and solid


areas. It is, therefore, sensible and correct to monitor them
on the basis of solid fields.

But in solid patch control, too, spectral measuring and


colorimetric evaluating have important advantages over
density control: it can be ascertained exactly whether a pre-
set hue has been reached.
Furthermore, reference colour locations can be entered
either as numerical values or as specimen measurements.
This is not possible in colour density measuring.

The Heidelberg colour measuring units indicate after the


first measurement whether or not the reference colour
location can be reached with a specific colour. If not, the
expected colour location difference ∆Epossible is output.

If there are deviations in excess of the allowed tolerance, the


necessary modifications will again be computed. The
spectral readings of the single-colour solid and single-colour
halftone patches are used in the calculation.

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4.12.3 Densitometric control by solid field

In addition to colorimetric data, spectrophotometers can


also establish density values for any colour filter. As an aid
to the user, Heidelberg therefore also provides colour
density values independent of the type of control.

Especially for repeat orders, for which


colour density reference values have already been
calculated, solid density control may be an alternative.

4.12.4 Colorimetric image control

The CPC 24 logs the entire printed sheet using a spectral


photometer and then divides it up into measurement points
of 2.0 mm × 2.4 mm. If the printed sheet is 1020 mm ×
720 mm in size, then there are 160 000 measurement
points. This means that colorimetric image control on the
basis of the printed image is possible for the first time. For
four-colour printing, this takes place on the basis of an
accurate defined off-press tonal proof or an OK sheet, while

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a colour pattern or an OK sheet is used for other colour
ranges. In addition to the image control, colour control
strips can also be used for control. The two control
processes can be combined with one another at any stage.

As it is only possible to control the printing machine during


image control if the structure of the image is known, the
printed image is automatically separated into its component
colours. Any other colours are controlled separately and
must therefore be defined manually. This can be done either
by selecting an area of the image which is printed with the
special colour or by selecting the special colour from a
database.

Once the special colours used have been entered, the special
colour tones used are recognised automatically. The colour
settings are calculated such that the discrepancy in colour of
the image points from the set image is minimised. Visible
deviations of critical colour tones and homogeneous colour
areas are taken more into consideration as colour deviations
are easier to see and recognise as an error in these cases
than they are in saturated colour tones and busy areas of
the image.

Limitations of image control:


■ Printing special colours over one another
■ Images with more than 4 colours

■ 5th colour in image


■ Hexachrome
■ Hi-fi colour

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4.13 Advantages of colorimetrics for offset printing

In conclusion, a survey of the essential advantages of


colorimetrics for offset printing:

■ The measurement readings match as closely as is


possible the subjective perception of colour.

■ Colorimetrics is a colour evaluation technique which


is independent of the printing process and can be used
throughout the printing process from the pre-press
stage via all proof stages and, finally, for quality
control.

■ Colorimetric reference values can also be given as


numerical values. An interface to pre-press units is
available.

■ Colorimetric reference values can be taken from


specimens.

■ Only with colorimetrics is it possible to objectively


tune colours.

■ Colorimetrics makes image-related colour control


possible (e.g. by means of gray fields) without
colour-specific calibration procedures and without
stored values.

■ By means of colorimetrics, all inks, even very light


special inks, can be controlled correctly and
consistently.

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■ Dot gains are reliably detected by spectral colour
measurement even if special inks are used.

■ The production run control is safer since changes in


the printing stock, ink soilings and metamerism can all
be detected.

■ Halftone printings with more than four colours can


also be controlled reliably.

■ The printing quality can be defined and verified better.


There is a measure for colour deviations independent
of the hue.

■ Spectral colour measurement makes the development


of better colour control models possible.

■ The printing industry will adapt to the colour measur-


ing principle currently used in all colouring industries.

■ Densitometry is an integral part of spectral colour


measurement.

■ The tendency toward the use of more than four inks is


accounted for.

■ Colorimetrics also makes it possible to objectively


compare parts of printed images with the originals.

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