Setting Trapping Options Trapping involves either spreading or overprinting portions of colored objects to avoid printing inaccuracies, the most common one being paper white showing at t
Trang 1Ill 27-6
Here’s what the options in this dialog control:
● Screening Technology This selector drop-down contains scripts for specific printing technologies such as Agfa and Linotronic image-setting devices When Standard Defaults is used as the Screening Technology, other options are set according to settings for your specific printer driver, accessed through Properties on the General tab
● Resolution This displays the output resolution of your printed material, the default value of which is set according to the Screening Technology selected A service bureau or your print vendor will know the specifics
● Basic Screen This option sets the resolution as measured in lines per inch of the screens rendered in your output material Check with your print vendor for the exact setting needed If you need to adjust this value, various choices will appear
depending upon which Screening Technology and image setter Resolution is currently selected The options shown in the Basic Screen section will also be available back in the Separations main tab
● Halftone Type The Halftone Type selector is used to set the shape of the actual dots that compose the screens in the final output Using this drop-down menu, you can choose to use such shapes as the Default (Dot), Line, Diamond, Elliptical, Euclidean, Lines, Grid, Microwaves, Rhomboid, and Star If you’re just getting into commercial printing, anything other than a dot halftone shape is used either because the print press pulls better prints, or because you really know what you’re doing and want to create an effect in the finished print job Microwaves, for example, is a special effect that sounds interesting, but you would need to have already seen the
Trang 2effect on a printed sample before choosing it, and then you would do a short run to
see whether the example produces the same effect in your own piece On the other
hand, Elliptical and Star shapes can be used to sharpen the output of a print, and
therefore are more of an enhancer than an effect
Setting Trapping Options
Trapping involves either spreading or overprinting portions of colored objects to avoid printing
inaccuracies, the most common one being paper white showing at the edge between two color
objects Overprinting causes one ink color to print over another, resulting in two layers of ink—
it’s a technique used to work around imprecise ink alignment You can set the overprinting of fills
and outlines applied to objects directly in your document; you cancel out of the Print dialog and
return to the open document Then with the Pick tool, right-click one or more objects, and choose
Overprint Fill or Overprint Outline from the pop-up menu options
Overprinting can be set in three ways: directly in your document for each object, in the
Separations tab using either fill or outline ink overprinting options, or using automated
trapping Where options have been set manually in your document or for each ink color,
overprinting operates on a three-level hierarchy, which creates a condition where one
overprinting setting overrides another one, as follows:
1. When printing, the objects in the drawing are first examined for any selected fill and/
or outline overprinting properties Applying overprint properties directly to an object
in a drawing overrides all other overprinting functions
2. Next, ink color overprinting options are examined If an ink color is set to overprint
and no object fill or outline overprint properties are applied, the ink color overprints
the objects beneath it
3. Finally, the trapping options you have chosen in the Separations tab of the Print
dialog are examined If no overprint options are set, then automatic trapping will be
applied if either Auto-spreading or Fixed Width is selected
Automatic trapping and overprinting options in the Separations tab have the following
effects on how colors in your document are printed:
● Preserve Document Overprints This option preserves the overprint options
applied directly to your drawing objects, regardless of the settings selected
elsewhere Your other option (on the drop-down list), Ignore, lets you work with the
settings in the Separations tab, and any custom overprinting you’ve applied directly
to objects in your document is ignored
● Always Overprint Black When this option is selected, all objects that have color
tints between 95 and 100 percent black will overprint underlying ink colors Usually,
you want black to overprint; black is the key plate for all the fine details, particularly
necessary if you’re using a bitmap image in part of your design
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Trang 3● Auto-spreading This option causes CorelDRAW’s print engine automatically
to create an overprinting outline of identical ink color around objects where they overlap other ink colors When the option is selected, you can set the Maximum width of the spread within a range of 0 to 10 points (0.5 point is the default, a little wider than a hairline) Automatic width values vary according to the difference between the color being overprinted and the underlying color Choose Fixed Width
to set the Auto-spreading width of the outline to a constant width regardless of this color difference When Auto-spreading is selected, choosing the Text Above option makes CorelDRAW ignore text sizes below a certain size; small text is often distorted by the spread effect Choose a size between 0 and 200 points; the default
is 18 points
In-RIP Trapping Settings
If your output device is equipped with its own In-RIP trapping software, you can use
this option The term RIP stands for raster image processor, the process of converting
mathematical chunks of information to a map of where dots of ink go on the page to
represent what you see onscreen Many high-end image setters are equipped with internal software with which certain In-RIP trapping makes the whole trapping process faster and more efficient
This option is dimmed unless the output device defined on the General tab is PostScript compatible, PostScript 3 is selected in the Compatibility area of the PostScript tab, and Print
Separations is disabled in the Color tab With the feature enabled, choose the In-RIP
Trapping option, and then click the Settings button to open the In-RIP Trapping Settings dialog, shown in Figure 27-4
Here you’ll find an ink listing similar to the one in the Separations tab, plus other options for setting these items:
● Neutral Density This is a value based upon the relative darkness of each process ink, ranging from 0.001 to 10.000 Trapping software derives neutral density for spot colors based upon their CMYK equivalents Default values often work, or the value can be set according to advice from your print vendor Most third-party ink swatches list the neutral density values for each ink color
● Type You choose the Type for an individual ink by clicking its type in the top list
to reveal an options drop-down Although Neutral Density is the default for Image Trap Placement, this option becomes available when you have a specialty ink defined for a spot plate, such as a spot varnish You can choose from Neutral Density, Transparent, Opaque, or Opaque Ignore Opaque is often used for heavy nontransparent inks such as metallic inks, to prevent the trapping of underlying colors while still allowing trapping along the ink’s edges Opaque Ignore is used for
heavy nontransparent inks to prevent trapping of underlying color and along the
ink’s edges
Trang 4● Trap Width This option controls the overlap of adjacent colored objects into each
other The slightly overlapping colors prevent the appearance of white gaps due to
misregistration when printing The default Trap Width is 0.25 point A larger
number will accommodate larger printing errors due to older machinery
● Black Trap Width This option controls the distance that inks spread into solid
black, or the distance between black ink edges and underlying inks It is used when
the amount of black ink reaches the percentage specified in the Black Limit field (in
the Thresholds area)
● Trap Color Reduction Use this option to prevent certain butt-aligned colors
(areas on different plates that meet one another) from creating a trap that is darker
than both colors combined Values smaller than 100 percent lighten the color of
the trap
● Step Limit This option controls the degree to which components of butt-aligned
color must vary before a trap is created, usually set between 8 and 20 percent Lower
percentages increase sensitivity to color differences and create larger traps
● Black Limit This value controls the minimum amount of black ink required
before the value entered in the Black Trap Width field is applied
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available
Trang 5● Black Density Limit This option controls the neutral density value at, or above, the value at which the In-RIP feature considers it solid black To treat a dark spot-color as black, enter its Neutral Density value in this field
● Sliding Trap Limit This value sets the percentage difference between the neutral density of butt-aligned colors at which the trap is moved from the darker side of the color edge toward the centerline Use this option when colors have similar neutral densities, to prevent abrupt shifts in trap color along a fountain fill edge, for example
● Trap Objects to Images Choosing this option lets you create traps between vectors and bitmaps
● Image Trap Placement This option sets where the trap falls when trapping vector objects to bitmap objects to either Neutral Density, Spread, Choke, or Centerline in this option’s drop-down list Neutral Density applies the same trapping rules used elsewhere in the printed document Using this option to trap a vector to a bitmap can cause uneven edges because the trap moves from one side of the edge to the other Spread produces a trap in areas where bitmaps meet vector objects Choke causes vector objects to overlap the bitmap (the bitmap is choked) Centerline creates a trap that straddles the edge between vectors and bitmaps Trap Objects To Images must
be checked for Image Trap Placement to have any effect
● Internal Image Trapping This option creates traps within the area of a bitmap,
which is useful when very high contrast and posterized images are part of a design
● Trap Black-And-White Images Choosing this option performs trapping between vectors and black-and-white (monochrome) bitmaps
Setting Prepress Options
The term prepress is used to describe the preparing of film for various printing processes.
Choosing the Prepress tab displays all options controlling how your printing material will be produced, and which information is included on the page, as shown in Figure 27-5
Here’s what the options in the Prepress tab offer:
● Paper/Film Settings These two options specify negative/positive printing and on which side of the film the light-sensitive emulsion layer appears Choose Invert to cause your output to print as a negative; choose Mirror to cause the image to print backward Ask the press operator or service bureau which way their image setter is set up for film
● Print File Information A Job Name/Slug Line text box is printed on each separation,
to better visually identify each printed sheet The path and filename of your document
is used by default, but you can enter your own information Choose Print Page Numbers
Trang 6to print page numbers as defined in your CorelDRAW document; choose Position
Within Page to print this information inside the page boundaries—outside is the
default
● Crop/Fold Marks Crop marks help locate your document’s page corners; fold
marks indicate folds for a specific layout Choose Crop/Fold Marks to print these
markings While this is selected, you can also choose Exterior Only to cause the
marks to print only outside the page boundaries on your printing material, which
produces a more polished final presentation Both options are selected by default
● Registration Marks and Styles Registration marks help to align each separation
plate; the film print is used to make the plate, and the plates need to be precisely
aligned when your piece is printed, or you get a “Sunday Funny Pages” finished
output Choosing Print Registration Marks (selected by default) includes these marks
on your output Use the Style selector to specify a mark shape; the selector includes
a preview of both positive and negative versions
● Calibration Bars and Densitometer Scales These two options enable you to
include color calibration bars and densitometer scales outside the page boundaries
of your printed material Calibration bars are useful for evaluating color density
accuracy by printing a selection of grayscale shades that may be used for measuring
the density—or blackness value—of film or paper output
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information and markings
Trang 7● Bitmap Downsampling Unless you’ve imported a bitmap image whose resolution
as placed in a document exceeds the maximum output resolution of the printing device,
it’s not necessary to check either the Color & Grayscale or the Monochrome check
boxes This feature is provided as a time-saver: for example, if an image is greater
than 300 dpi and your output device is only capable of a maximum of 300 dpi,
time is wasted as excess data is spooled to the printer … and then discarded
● Marks to Objects Choosing this option places the currently selected prepress marks around the bounding box containing the objects on each page These appear regardless of whether the Crop/Fold Marks option is selected to print
Choosing PostScript Options
None of the preceding information on separations and advanced trapping features will be meaningful if your chosen output is not to a PostScript device If you don’t currently see the PostScript tab, shown in Figure 27-6, you need to define a different print driver on the General tab PostScript options offer control over a specific type of page description
language, Level 2, Level 3, the type of device, compatibility, and features covered next
compatible
Trang 8You set the following options on the PostScript tab:
● Compatibility In most cases, the printer and the PPD (PostScript Printer Description)
file you choose are automatically set with the Compatibility option, which determines
which PostScript features the output device is capable of handling Older printers may
be limited to PostScript Level 1 or 2 technology; most new models are compatible with
Level 3 If you’re unsure which to choose, check out the manufacturer’s FAQ area on
their website or the physical printer documentation
● Conform to DSC Document Structuring Convention (DSC) is a special file format
for PostScript documents It includes a number of comments that provide information
for postprocessors Postprocessors can shuffle the order of pages, print two or more
pages on a side, and perform other tasks often needlessly performed by humans
● Bitmaps Selecting Level 2 or 3 PostScript-compatible printers offers you the
Compression Type option of Use JPEG to reduce printing time if you have bitmap
images in your document When this option is selected, the JPEG Quality slider is
available for setting the quality of the bitmaps being printed Keep in mind that
JPEG is a lossy compression standard; some of the original image information is
discarded, quality is compromised, and at high compression settings, a photograph
can take on visual noise
● Maintain OPI Links This option preserves links to server-based bitmap images,
provided you have imported temporary low-resolution versions using the Open
Prepress Interface (OPI) option when you created your CorelDRAW document
Using OPI, you can store high-resolution bitmap images in a printer’s memory, and
work temporarily with an imported low-resolution version When your document is
printed, the lower-resolution version is swapped with the higher-resolution version
By default, this option is selected
● Resolve DCS Links Desktop Color Separation (DCS) technology is similar to
OPI; you use placeholders in your document that have links to digitally separated
images for use in process or multi-ink printing When this option is enabled, the
linked images automatically replace the placeholder images at print time By default,
this option is selected If this option is not selected, a prompt will appear while the
document is being printed, so you can relink the files manually through directory
boxes
● Fonts PostScript printing devices can print Type 1, True Type, and OpenType
fonts Type 1 fonts are often preferred because the font data is written in PostScript
language OpenType fonts, when a typographer creates them, can be coded to
Bézier curves (in which case programs recognize them as PostScript encoded) or to
Quadratic B-Splines—which are usually interpreted by an application as True Type
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Trang 9in structure A good reason to lean toward Type 1 fonts when you output to PostScript
is that there is no ambiguity to the structure of a Type 1 font CorelDRAW’s options let you control which fonts are used during printing It’s more reliable to download the fonts to the printing device; this speeds printing and produces better-looking text
To enable this feature, select Download Type 1 Fonts If this option is disabled, fonts are printed as curves, which can take a lot of printing time when you have a lot of text on a page When you select the Download Type 1 Fonts option, the Convert True Type To Type 1 option becomes available (and selected by default)
● PDF Marks If your document is being prepared for printing as a composite to an Adobe PDF distiller, these options become available You can specify how your PDF file initially displays when viewed in Adobe Acrobat Reader or in a third-party reader by using options in the On Start, Display selector Choose Page Only, Full Screen, or Thumbnail view You can also choose whether to Include Hyperlinks and/
or Include Bookmarks in the resulting PDF file If you’re preparing a PDF to send to
a service bureau for high-resolution output, don’t use hyperlinks; they mess up the appearance of your printed piece, and let’s get real—how does your intended audience click on a piece of paper to visit a website?
● Auto Increase Flatness This option lets you simplify the printing of curves by decreasing the number of straight vector lines that describe the curve This option can be used as a last resort if you run into problems printing highly complex shapes
in your CorelDRAW document, usually a printer memory problem, as in not enough
memory
● Auto Increase Fountain Steps This option makes the print engine examine your document for opportunities to increase the number of fountain steps in an effort to
avoid fountain fill banding Banding is the visible effect of not having enough
sequential steps in a fountain fill; you see bands of gradually changing color instead
of a smooth transition from one object area to another Increasing the number of steps that describe a fountain fill will cause fountain fills to appear smoother, but it will also increase printing complexity and output time
● Optimize Fountain Fills This option works in reverse of the previous option by
setting the print engine to decrease the number of fountain steps set for objects in
your document to the number of steps your printer is capable of reproducing
CorelDRAW’s Printing Issues Tab
The process of verifying that every last detail in your document will print as expected is
often called preflight, and the good news is that the Issues tab is your flight attendant.
CorelDRAW examines the contents of your document and the printing options you’ve selected and then compares them with the capabilities of your selected printer and your
Trang 10selected output material Printing snafus are found automatically and flagged by warning
symbols, as shown in the earlier illustration in this chapter about issues icons Figure 27-7
is the Issues tab, which is divided into two sections; with Print Preview turned on, it’s both
documented and visually obvious what this proposed print has going against it
The top half of the Issues dialog lists the preflight issues detected with a brief explanation
The bottom half explains the causes, identifies the exact problems, and offers suggestions
and recommendations for correcting them
The Issues feature will not prevent you from printing your document If you want, you
can deactivate the feature by selecting the found issue in the upper portion of the tab and
choosing “Don’t check for this issue in the future” at the bottom of the tab This disables the
detection of the issue in the Preflight Settings dialog Clicking the Settings button opens this
dialog, which also lets you save and load current settings for future use
Previewing Your Printed Document
CorelDRAW’s Print Preview feature provides a very good way of viewing your document
and performing minor touchups, and it’s fully integrated with CorelDRAW’s print engine
To open the Print Preview feature, click the Print Preview button from within the Print
dialog Print Preview also is available in the File menu
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this dialog