This disclosure relates to optimizing printing on substrates that include, but are not limited to, plastic cards, passport pages and retransfer films. The plastic cards can be cards such as financial cards including credit and debit cards, identification cards, driver's licenses, and other plastic cards that are personalized. The retransfer films can be any films on which an image is printed, and then the printed image is transferred to a substrate, such as a plastic card or a passport page.
When performing multi-color printing on substrates such as plastic cards, passport pages and retransfer films using a print head and a multi-color print ribbon, multi-color graphics such as a photograph and single color data such as text are typically printed at the same resolution. However, multi-color graphics and single color data do not necessarily require the same print resolution.
Systems and methods are described where first printing is applied to a substrate by a print head at a first resolution and second printing is applied to the substrate by the same print head at a second resolution, which is higher than the first resolution. In one embodiment, systems and methods are described where multi-color graphics on a substrate are printed at a first resolution, and single color data is printed at a second, higher resolution. The multi-color graphics can be a printed photograph of a person, a printed logo, or any printed feature that is printed using multiple colors. The single color data can be printed alphanumeric text such as a person's name, address, account number or any other data that is printed using a single color. The printing sequence does not matter. The first printing at the first resolution can occur before the second printing at the second resolution. Alternatively, the second printing at the second resolution can occur before the first printing at the first resolution.
The substrate can be, but is not limited to, a plastic card, a passport page or a retransfer film. The plastic card can be a card such as a financial card including credit and debit cards, an identification card, a driver's license, and other plastic cards that are personalized. The retransfer film can be any films on which an image is printed, and then the printed image is transferred to a substrate, such as a plastic card or a passport page.
The methods described herein can be employed in any multi-color printing system. Examples of systems include, but are not limited to, a plastic card or passport personalization machines. One example of a plastic card or passport personalization machine is often termed a desktop personalization machine or desktop printer which is designed for relatively small scale, individual personalization and production of plastic cards or passports. Desktop card or passport printers have a relatively small footprint intended to permit the printer to reside on a desktop. Many examples of desktop printers are known, such as the SD or CD family of desktop card printers available from Entrust Datacard Corporation of Shakopee, Minn. Other examples of desktop printers are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,434,728 and 7,398,972, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
In some embodiments, the CMYK panels 12, 14, 16, 18 can be pigment, while in other embodiments the CMY panels 12, 14, 16 can be formed of dye while the K panel 18 can be a pigment. In many applications, printing with a dye can be performed at a lower print resolution than printing with a pigment.
As described further below, multi-color graphics on the substrate 20 are printed using the CMY panels 12, 14, 16 at a first print resolution, and single color data such as alphanumeric text is printed on the substrate 20 using the K panel 18 at a second, higher print resolution, where the printing is performed using the same print head.
When a print job on the substrate 20 is to be performed, multi-color graphics such as a photograph of an intended holder of the substrate 20, are printed by the print head 32 using the CMY panels 12, 14, 16 at a first print resolution. Any single color data, such as alphanumeric text like the person's name, address, account number or the like, is printed on the substrate 20 using the K panel 18 at a second, higher print resolution.
To help explain the concepts described herein, the following example is provided. This example assumes that the print head 32 is a 600 dpi print head. However, it is to be realized that the concepts described herein can be applied to print heads having other print resolutions as well. With a 600 dpi print head, printing of the multi-color graphics using the CMY panels 12, 14, 16 is relatively slow compared to printing using the K panel 18. However, in many instances, a lower print resolution can be used for the dye of the CMY panels 12, 14, 16 and still achieve adequate print quality. Therefore, one way to minimize the impact on printing throughput is to split the printing/rendering for the panels of the ribbon 10 at different resolutions. For example:
The CMY panels can be printed at any resolution that is less than the resolution of the print head and less than the resolution at which the K panel is printed. Assuming the example of a 600 dpi print head, in one embodiment the CMY panels can be printed at a resolution that is less than 300 dpi. In another embodiment, the CMY panels can be printed at a resolution approximately equal to 300 dpi. In still another embodiment, the CMY panels can be printed at a resolution that is between about 300 dpi to about 450 dpi. In still another embodiment, the CMY panels can be printed at a resolution that is approximately equal to 450 dpi
Any suitable technique can be used to perform the split the printing/rendering. For example:
Advantages of the split printing/rendering described herein include a reduction in client/server rendering time, data bandwidth advantages specially with cloud applications, color profiling and other enhancements for lower print resolution are faster on embedded systems, and printer throughput is increased.
The examples disclosed in this application are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not limitative. The scope of the invention is indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description; and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are intended to be embraced therein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62365084 | Jul 2016 | US |