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Dictionary of Terms

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Thursday September 02, 2010
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What does that mean?

Basecoat - term used to denote a color applied and cured on a CD before the other colors are applied. Most of the time, basecoats are white. The purpose of the basecoat is more or less the same as in any painting scenario. The basecoat allows consistent color, brightness, and serves as a background to graphics.

Bitmap/Raster images - paint and image-editing software, such as Adobe Photoshop, generate bitmap images, also called raster images. The images use a grid (also known as a bitmap or raster) of small squares, known as pixels, to represent graphics. Each pixel in a bitmap image has a specific location and color value assigned to it. For example, a bicycle tire in a bitmap image is made up of a collection of pixels in that location, with each pixel part of a mosaic that gives the appearance of a tire. When working with bitmap images, you edit pixels rather than objects or shapes. Bitmap images are the most common electronic medium for continuous-tone images, such as photographs or images created in painting programs, because they can represent subtle gradations of shades and color. Bitmap images are resolution dependent--that is, they represent a fixed number of pixels. As a result, they can appear jagged and lose detail if they are scaled on-screen or if they are printed at a higher resolution than they were created for. Bitmap images are good for reproducing subtle gradations of color, as in photographs. They can have jagged edges when printed at too large a size or displayed at too high a magnification.

Bleed - the term used to describe extending beyond the border of the artwork. For most presswork, it allows a margin of error without a reduction in the quality or appearance of the end result. Generally, a bleed of several mm or 1/4 inch is appropriate.

Color separation - The act of decomposing a color graphic or photo into single-color layers. For example, to print full-color photos with an offset printing press, one must first separate the photo into the four basic ink colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (CMYK). Each single-color layer is then printed separately, one on top of the other, to give the impression of infinite colors.

Compact Disc - an optical storage device capable of holding up to 650 MB.

CDR - is short for "CD-Recordable". Recordable CDs are WORM (Write Once, Read Multiple) media that work just like standard CDs. The advantage of CD-R over other types of optical media is that you can use the discs with a standard CD player. The disadvantage is that you can't reuse a disc.

Create Outlines/Convert to Curves - lets you turn type into a set of compound paths that you can edit and manipulate as you would any other graphic object. These commands get font outline information from the actual font files installed on your system. When you create outlines from type, characters are converted in their current positions; they retain all graphics formatting such as their stroke and fill.

Digital printing - the term used to describe any printing technique which does not involve the generation of film to print (as in offset printing). Generally, digital printing uses high end inkjet, laser and other printing presses.

Digital proof - the term describing a more efficient mechanism for reviewing final artwork before proceeding to press. Digital proofs are appropriate for all printing and silkscreening except where accurate color reproduction is an important goal. In these cases, other proofing mechanisms may be required.

Duplication - the term referring to reproducing an image on recordable CDs.

DVD-R- stands for "Digital Versatile Disc Recordable". Like regular audio/music CDs, a DVD looks similar. A single layer DVD stores up to 2 hours of very good quality DVD-Video, including several audio tracks in formats like stereo, Dolby Digital or DTS and also advanced menu systems, subtitles and still pictures that can be played by standalone DVD Players and computer DVD-ROMs. It is also possible to have up to 4.37GB on a DVD.

Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) format - The EPS file format is used to transfer PostScript language artwork between applications and is supported by most illustration and page-layout programs. Typically, EPS files represent single illustrations or tables that are placed onto a host page, but an EPS file can also represent a complete page. Because EPS files are based on the PostScript language, they can contain both vector and bitmap graphics. In addition to the PostScript language representation of the graphics to be placed, many EPS files contain a bitmap preview of the graphic that the application can display. EPS files intended to be used by Macintosh applications, for example, can contain PICT or TIFF images for screen preview; those intended for use by Windows applications contain either TIFF or Windows Metafile bitmap images.

Film - a process specific photograph of the client artwork used to produce screens or plates.

Glass Master - Metal plate used in injection moulding process of cd manufacturing to imprint grooves corresponding to your master CDR's stored information.

Gradient - a transition between one color and another, or one shade of a color and another, or one density of a color and another.

Inner hub - the area from the inner hole on a CD to the area where the mirror band begins. The inner hub's main purpose is for easy handling by machines and people.

Manufacturing - for CDs, it is the manufacturing of the CD based on the supplied master CD from the client. There is no recordable layer in manufactured CDs as in recordable CDs.

Master - the media containing the original data/audio image which is used to reproduce subsequent copies.

Mirror band - A slightly lighter area of a CD in which information is not stored but reflective material extends. It is located between the inner hub and the main information area on the CD.

Offset printing - a printing technique which is more efficient at higher volumes, it involves the use of film and plates to print on the target surface.

PMS/Pantone (Pantone Matching System) - Used for printing spot colors. Each PANTONE color has a specified CMYK equivalent. To select a PANTONE color, first determine the ink color you want, using either the PANTONE Color Formula Guide or an ink chart. PANTONE books are available from PANTONE's Web site.

Panel - 1 side of one page of a printed item. A good everyday example is a 3 x 5 photograph which has two panels, one with the photograph and the other side which is blank.

Process color/printing - A process color is printed using a combination of four standard process inks: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (CMYK). We use process colors when the job requires so many colors that using individual spot inks would be expensive or impractical, such as when printing color photographs. Keep the following guidelines in mind when specifying a process color:

  • For best results in a printed document, specify process colors using CMYK values printed in process-color reference charts.
  • The final color values of a process color are its values in CMYK.
  • Don't specify a process color based on how it looks on your monitor unless you have set up a color management system properly and you understand its limitations for previewing color.

Registration - The ability to place the target image in a precise location on the target surface. A tight registration is important so that no spacing appears between two adjacent colors on the CD or other printed material.

Registration mark - guidelines that should appear in artwork and film to guide the press operator on setting up overlapping or adjacent colors.

Replication - the common term for CD manufacturing.

Silkscreening - in layman's terms, painting the CD with a graphic image using film to generate screens in which the paint is pressed through.

Spot color -A spot color is a special premixed ink that is used instead of, or (less commonly) in addition to, CMYK process inks, and that requires its own printing plate on a printing press. Use spot color when few colors are specified and color accuracy is critical. Spot color inks can accurately reproduce colors that are outside the gamut of process colors. However, the exact appearance of the printed spot color is determined by combination of the ink medium it's printed on, so it isn't affected by color values you specify or by color management. Minimize the number of spot colors you use. Each spot color you create will generate an additional spot color printing plate for a printing press, increasing your printing costs. If you think you might require more than four colors, consider printing your document using process colors.

Stacking ring - a raised ring on recordable CDs which allows spacing between two CDRs when stacked on top of each other. The stacking ring presents limitations during the silkscreening process.

Template - a blank artwork design to be used as a container and guide when preparing your artwork.

Tagged-Image File Format (TIFF) - TIFF is used to exchange files between applications and computer platforms. TIFF is a flexible bitmap image format that is supported by virtually all paint, image-editing, and page-layout applications. Also, virtually all desktop scanners can produce TIFF images. TIFF supports RGB, CMYK, and grayscale color models.

When you export/save artwork in TIFF, choose CMYK, or grayscale color model and define the image resolution. Do not use the the LZW Compression option.

Vector Graphic - Drawing programs such as Adobe Illustrator and Macromedia Freehand create vector graphics, made of lines and curves defined by mathematical objects called vectors. Vectors describe graphics according to their geometric characteristics. For example, a bicycle tire in a vector graphic is made up of a mathematical definition of a circle drawn with a certain radius, set at a specific location, and filled with a specific color. You can move, resize, or change the color of the tire without losing the quality of the graphic. A vector graphic is resolution-independent--that is, it can be scaled to any size and printed on any output device at any resolution without losing its detail or clarity. As a result, vector graphics are the best choice for type (especially small type) and bold graphics that must retain crisp lines when scaled to various sizes--for example, logos. Because computer monitors represent images by displaying them on a grid, both vector and bitmap images are displayed as pixels on-screen.

Vector graphics are good for reproducing crisp outlines, as in logos or illustrations. They can be printed or displayed at any resolution without losing detail.

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