dc.description.abstract | Rules, sometimes, are meant to be broken. For example, printing
freshmen learn that lithography works based on the principle of
"ink and water do not mix." By the time they are seniors, they
learn that emulsified ink is necessary in order for a lithographic
press to function properly. After all, ink and water do mix.
Any printing student or professional will admit that a golden rule
in pictorial color image reproduction is that process color or
CMYK inks should always be used. To challenge the rule, one
must ask the question, "Can pictorial color images be reproduced
using non-CMYK inks?"
This is the question that is answered in the paper "Non-CMYK
Pictorial Color Image Reproduction." The paper was authored by
Bob Chung, Gravure Research Professor in the RIT School of
Print Media, and was published in Test Targets 8.0 in the
"Gallery of Visual Interest" section. | en_US |