The invention relates to a method of printing a color surface of an object by printing dots of curable ink in several superposed layers.
Elevated printing and 3D-printing have become an attractive method of producing relief-like objects and three-dimensional objects with almost arbitrary shapes. A problem is, however, that such printed objects tend to have an unnatural appearance because the surface of the object that is constituted by cured ink appears to be too glossy. Although the gloss of a color surface may be controlled to appear more shiny, or glossy by adding an amount of clear ink, or varnish, on top of the colorants that make up the color, it is hard to obtain the opposite, which is a more satiny, matte appearance.
If the 3D-data for printing the object have been acquired by scanning an original or a model, it is possible, at least in principle, to scan the original with such a high resolution that the natural micro-texture of the surface of the original is also reproduced on the printed object. The gloss of the printed object, at least as determined by this micro-texture, should then be similar to that of the original. However, scanning objects with such a high resolution is cumbersome and implies the need to process a huge amount of data. The printing resolution is also insufficient to reproduce such fine spatial frequencies. Furthermore, the gloss of the printed object also depends on the applied material. This line of approach is therefore not practical.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an efficient method of controlling the gloss of a color surface of a printed object, especially in the satiny, matte range, which is the opposite of the shiny, glossy range.
In order to achieve this objective, the method according to the invention comprises the steps of:
Thus, according to the invention, a gloss-reducing micro-texture is additionally and artificially formed on the surface of the printed object. Since the micro-texture is a repetitive pattern, a small amount of data is sufficient for defining the micro-texture, so that the required amount of data processing is limited. Moreover, the micro-texture needs to define only a two-dimensional spatial distribution of elevated parts and depressed parts, whereas the height difference between these parts in the third dimension is scalable depending upon the desired gloss value. Once a gloss function that indicates the gloss value of the surface as a function of the height difference has been established for a specific micro-texture, any desired gloss value can easily be translated into a height difference that can then be used, in the print process, for controlling the number of superposed ink dots that form the elevated parts of the micro-texture. In particular, it has been found that a surface having a minimum gloss of 20 gloss units (GU) on a scale from 0 to 100 GU without the present invention, may be printed with a gloss of less than 2 GU on this same scale by the application of the invented method.
More specific optional features of the invention are indicated in the dependend claims.
It is preferred that an elementary cell of the repetitive pattern that forms the micro-texture has dimensions close to or below the limit of spatial resolution of the naked human eye under normal viewing conditions, so that the micro-texture itself is hardly visible on the printed object and only its impact on the surface gloss is perceptible.
The elevated parts of the micro-texture may be constituted by pillars of ink which have a uniform height and have a uniform cross-section over their entire height, whereas the depressed parts are simply formed by the gaps between these pillars. In that case, the height difference between the elevated parts and the depressed parts will simply be given by the height of the pillars. Preferably, these pillars are made with the smallest ink drops that are available in the printer in order to follow the defined texture as well as possible.
For example, the size of the elementary cell may be in the order of magnitude of 350 μm or less. If an ink jet printer with a print resolution of 450 dpi is used for printing the three-dimensional object, then a suitable choice for the micro-texture could be a matrix-like pattern of isolated pillars with a dimension of 56 μm×56 μm (corresponding to one pixel) and the width of the gaps between the pillars may be of the same size, so that an elementary cell would have dimensions of 112×112 μm2.
The micro-texture may be formed of white ink, or, optionally, of transparent ink, so that it does not significantly affect the color impression of the printed object. As an alternative, the micro-texture, in particular the elevated parts thereof, may be printed with colored ink so that the color of the elevated parts will determine the color of the surface area. A regular halftone colored layer can then be printed on top of the white micro-texture. In particular, it has been found that the gloss is affected by the composition of the colorants in this colored halftone layer. A compound color, being constituted by at least two colorants, is found to have a lower gloss than a simple color, wherein only one colorant is used, if the same height difference in a particular micro-texture is applied. This effect is advantageously used to set up a multidimensional gloss function with the height difference and color composition as variables, which, after proper calibration, is practiced to make the gloss of a full color surface more uniform by modulating the height of the micro-texture.
In yet another embodiment, the elevated parts or pillars may be printed with ink in any suitable color, e.g. a color that is particularly suited for building-up relatively high pillars with a small cross-section.
Embodiment examples of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
As is shown in
The print head 10 is controlled by a print controller 16. The print controller 16 communicates with a user interface 18 where a user can specify among others the desired shape of the three-dimensional object 12, the surface color or colors of that object, as well as the desired surface gloss of the object.
The printed object 12 has a core 20 that is formed by several superposed layers of cured ink and defines the three-dimensional shape of the object. In the example shown, the object has a flat top surface area 22 surrounded by sloped surface areas 24 and relatively small side faces 26 that extend normal to the plane of the substrate 14.
In order to reduce the surface gloss of the object 12, micro-textures 28, 30 have been formed on the flat top surface area 22 and on each of the sloped surface areas 24. The micro-textures 28, 30, which have been shown in cross-section in
In the example shown, an ink in an arbitrary color has been used for forming the core 20 of the object 12, whereas the elevated parts of the micro-textures 28, 30 and 32 are formed by white ink. The color appearance of the object is determined by a continuous color layer 36 of colored ink.
In another embodiment, a continuous color layer may be formed on the surface of the core 20, and the micro-textures 28, 30 may be formed of transparent ink.
In example A, the elevated parts, represented by black squares, have a size of 56×56 μm, which is the size of a single pixel in case of a print resolution of 450 dpi. The depressed parts are formed by continuous gaps that separate the pillars and each have also a width of 56 μm. Thus, an elementary cell 38 of the repetitive pattern has a size of 112×112 μm.
In the example B, the pillars and the elementary cell have the same size, but the elevated parts and the depressed parts form a checkerboard pattern.
In example C, the elementary cell 38 has a size of 4×4 pixel and the number of pillars per surface area has been reduced.
In example D, the elementary cell 38 has a size of 4×2 pixel.
Examples E-L show patterns in which the pillars (elevated parts 32) have more complex shapes and/or larger dimensions. For example, the pillars in the examples G, H, and I have a size of 2×2 pixel. As has been illustrated by examples F and L, the pattern may also be anisotropic, so that the gloss may be different in two mutually orthogonal directions.
Experiments have hinted to the preliminary result that the pattern shown in examples G and I, with square pillars of 2×2 pixels in an elementary cell 38 of 3×3 pixels for G and square pillars of 2×2 pixels in an elementary cell of 3×6 pixels for I, are particularly useful.
In experiments, the gloss of surface areas with the micro-textures shown in
A number of steps of an embodiment example of the method according to the invention have been indicated in a flow diagram in
Steps S1 and S2 are preparatory steps in which a pattern of the micro-texture to be used is defined (e.g. the pattern of example I in
In step S3, the process of printing the three-dimensional object 12 starts with reading (or calculating) the 3D data of that object, comprising shape, color and gloss. Then, in step S4, a surface area, e.g. 22, is selected for which a specific target gloss value Gt shall be achieved. The color is processed in a color management module to obtain the CMYK-components for printing the color in step S5a. In parallel, the target gloss value is assigned to the surface area in step S5b. By knowing both the target gloss and the CMYK components, it is possible to determine the necessary height difference. Step S6 is a step of determining the corresponding height difference H by means of the gloss function 40, as shown in
The core 20 of the object 12 is printed in step S8 and the micro-texture 28 and/or 30 is printed in step S9, and the color layer 36 is printed in step S10, which completes the print process.
The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18185464.7 | Jul 2018 | EP | regional |