The invention relates to ink jet printing. More particularly, the invention relates to gloss control through selective deposition of transparent ink.
Various approaches are known with regard to controlling the glossiness of images printed using an ink jet printer.
Pin and Cure
A pin and cure system is known that allows adjustment of the gloss level of a printer's output. This helps a print shop tailor its products to its customer's needs. Such system consists of a set of adjustable UV LED pin lamps mounted inline with the printing area, and a set of larger mercury arc lamps after the print area. The adjustable nature of the LED lamps allows the ink to be set in place and the amount of flow to be controlled. Ink that is allowed to flow after being placed develops a smoother, glossier surface. Ink that is pinned harder does not flow and develops a more matte surface.
When the printer operator adjusts the pin and cure settings for various media, the chance of producing an unpredictable output having poor print quality is increased. Also, this process is time consuming as well as tedious. Because of the wide range of materials onto which an ink jet printer can print, it is possible to adjust the system so that the output is not acceptable, i.e. by introducing cure banding, as well as other print artifacts, such as ink bleed
Other Methods
Before pin and cure was available, there were already other methods of controlling the gloss on output from UV printers and other inkjet printers, such as LED printers, etc.
Printers manufactured by EFI, as well as those from other manufacturers, have always had the ability to adjust the UV lamp output. In this category of printer lower lamp output results in glossier prints. The drawback of this type of control is cure quality, adhesion, and surface feel suffer when the ink is not cured sufficiently.
Another method of gloss control involves adjusting the time-to-lamp. In a scanning printer it is usually possible to select a leading-lamp or post cure mode. This provides extra time from when the ink is jetted until it is cured, thus allowing drop spread and increased gloss. A significant problem with this approach is that time-to-lamp is affected by image width. Adding a delay between passes helps with uniformity, but impacts throughput.
Offset and screen printers address the issue of image gloss by allowing the printer operator to choose a gloss, semi-gloss, or matte ink.
Another option the printer operator has is during finishing. Printer output can be post coated or laminated. Some printers also offer a clear varnish internal to the machine. This type of printer is also suited to spot gloss.
Two-Pass Spot-Gloss
Some flat bed printers have a feature in which they offer spot-gloss without a clear ink. Their configurations allow the printer to print the entire image twice. First, the gloss areas are printed with their UV lamps at a low intensity. This allows for ink flow and a gloss surface. Then, the matte areas are printed, where the matte effect is accomplished by higher UV settings and less ink flow. The high cure over the already printed gloss areas insures a quality cure and no adhesion issues. However, a two-pass approach impacts throughput and can result in artifacts due to registration errors that occur as a result of the two-passes.
Embodiments of the invention take advantage of the change in gloss caused by overprinting a printed image with clear ink. Embodiments of the invention thus implement gloss control functionality in a printer without the requirements of a pin and cure or other known systems.
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
Embodiments of the invention take advantage of the change in gloss caused by overprinting a printed image with clear ink. Embodiments of the invention thus implement gloss control functionality in a printer without the requirements of a pin and cure or other known systems.
Gloss vs. Matte
The glossiness of a surface finish is effectively dictated by its surface roughness at a microscopic level. The smoother the surface, the glossier it appears. UV Ink drops are not absorbed into the media and do not evaporate, so they stand proud of the surface. This tendency lends itself toward rougher, more matte output. Allowing the ink to flow into a smoother surface provides for better gloss.
Clear Varnish
Traditionally clear ink or varnish has been applied at 100% coverage to increase the gloss of printed output.
Clear Varnish for Matte
In accordance with embodiments of the invention, by randomly depositing a low percentage of clear drops onto a smooth surface and curing them quickly while they are tallest, the surface roughness increases and the glossiness of the image drops. In embodiments of the invention, this is accomplished using a random-number generator, e.g. available in a personal computer. In an example, take the image file size×percent, e.g. 48″×600 dpi×48″×360 dpi×12%=59,719,680, and add that many dots at random X and Y coordinates to the file to be printed.
In a production printer, a small image is created this way, e.g. 1″ square, and the small image is applied by step-and-repeat over the whole image to save time. In embodiments of the invention, the percentage is determined, for example, per
Gloss Control
Embodiments of the invention take advantage of the change in gloss caused by overprinting a printed image with clear ink. In embodiments of the invention, clear ink is applied equally to the image and to the portion of the print medium that is not covered by the image. This results in a print that has a uniform matte appearance. In other embodiments of the invention, clear ink may be selectively applied to portions of the image and/or to the image and portions of the print medium and/or to portions of both the medium and portions of the print medium as desired to provide distinctly matte and glossy areas on the print. In those embodiments of the invention where the image and medium are equally covered with clear ink, the ink may be jetted without regard to image information in accordance with a profile within the printer driver that controls ink deposition either to the extent desired for a particular level of gloss control, e.g. 25% coverage of the print, and/or ink deposition can be subject to stochastic masking, such that objectionable visible artifacts are not produced by deposition of the clear ink.
Reduced Gloss Banding
Gloss banding is a phenomena that is common in inkjet printing, particularly with scanning carriage printers. It is a noticeable change in the glossiness of a band of print. Typically, this is an alternating pattern that has to do with the left-right/right-left nature of scanning printers.
Media Independence
Solvent and water based printers produce a very thin ink film layer that makes such printers dependent on the substrate's gloss level. Printing UV ink onto a gloss substrate, and then adding a clear ink for matte, allows the image to have a much different gloss appearance than the native media it is printed on. In some embodiments of the invention, the application of clear ink over the entire surface of the medium provides a more uniform appearance to the resulting print because the same amount of matte effect is achieved on the those portions of the medium the are not covered by the image as those that are covered by the image.
As can be seen from the example in Table 1 below, when printed onto a fairly glossy PSA medium the output can still be very matte.
Printer with Clear
User Interface
Media Database
Typically, the operator measures these blocks, but he may just pick the values that he likes. For purposes of this discussion, assume that the operator measured all the blocks and came up with a curve such as that of
When the time comes to print an image, the operator sees
Although the invention is described herein with reference to the preferred embodiment, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that other applications may be substituted for those set forth herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention should only be limited by the Claims included below.
This application is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/444,751, filed Jul. 28, 2014, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference thereto.
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Entry |
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Merriam-Webster definition of Matte [retrieved on Oct. 28, 2016], Full Definition of Matte, definition b. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160355030 A1 | Dec 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14444751 | Jul 2014 | US |
Child | 15057012 | US |