This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-089758 filed on Apr. 14, 2011. The entire disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-089758 is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a technology for printing an image on a printing medium.
2. Background Technology
With printers that are used as printing devices, printing is carried out by discharging ink onto a printing medium from a printing head. In addition to colored inks, white inks having light shielding characteristics and metallic inks having special gloss are discharged from printing heads onto printing media (e.g., Patent Document 1).
Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication No. 2007-50555 (Patent Document 1) is an example of the related art.
However, when white ink having light-shielding properties and metallic ink having special gloss are printed on a printing medium so that they overlap, there are cases where the glossy appearance imparted to the printed image by the metallic ink is decreased. This type of problem is not restricted to cases in which metallic ink and white ink are printed so that they overlap. This problem also occurs in cases where a light-shielding ink having light-shielding properties and a special glossy ink having special gloss are printed so that they overlap.
Consequently, an advantage of the invention is to provide a technology whereby a decrease in the glossy appearance of a special glossy ink is inhibited when printing is carried out using a light-shielding ink and a special glossy ink.
The invention is developed in order to resolve at least some of the above problems and can be worked in the form of the following modes and application examples.
A printing device for printing an image, including an affixing part for affixing ink to a printing medium; and
a controller for controlling the ink volumes of each of a colored ink, a light-shielding ink having light-shielding properties, and a special glossy ink having special gloss that are respectively affixed to the printing medium from the affixing part;
the controller further including
a field discriminating part for discriminating an overlap field of a light-shielding ink field in which a light-shielding ink is employed and a special glossy ink field in which a special glossy ink is employed in a field in which the image is to be formed in accordance with image data;
and an ink volume controller for allowing, in the overlap field, the ink volume of light-shielding ink to be brought lower than the ink volume of the light-shielding ink determined in accordance with the image data, irrespective of the overlap field.
In accordance with the printing device described in Application Example 1, the ink volume of light-shielding ink can be reduced in overlap fields by the controller. By reducing the ink volume of light-shielding ink, a decline in the glossy appearance of the special glossy ink in the overlap fields can be inhibited. In addition, consumption of light-shielding ink can be reduced.
The printing device according to Application example 1, wherein the ink volume controller adjusts to zero the ink volume of light-shielding ink that is affixed to the printing medium from the affixing part in the overlap field. In accordance with the printing device of Application Example 2, the ink volume of light-shielding ink in the overlap field is set to zero by the controller. As a result, a decline in glossy appearance of the special glossy ink in the overlap field can be inhibited. In addition, consumption of light-shielding ink can be reduced.
The printing device according to Application Example 1 or Application Example 2, wherein the controller also includes a selection part for allowing the user to select whether or not the ink volume of the light-shielding ink is to be reduced by the ink volume controller. In accordance with the printing device of Application Example 3, operability when the user is printing data is improved because the user can use the selection part to select whether or not the ink volume of the special glossy ink is to be reduced.
The printing device according to any of Application Examples 1 to 3, wherein the special glossy ink is a metallic ink. In accordance with the printing device of Application Example 4, a Metallic ink is used as the special glossy ink, allowing printing having a metallic glossy appearance to be carried out.
The printing device according to any of Application Examples 1 to 4, wherein the light-shielding ink is white ink. In accordance with the printing device of Application Example 5, by using white ink as the light-shielding ink, it is possible to prevent dramatic decrease in the brightness of the printed image.
The printing device according to any of Application Examples 1 to 5, wherein the printing medium is a transparent printing medium that has light-transmissive properties. In accordance with the printing device of Application Example 6, an image can be formed on a transparent printing medium. As a result, a printing medium can be provided whereby a printed image can be seen from the surface on the opposite side from the printed surface, in addition to a printed image that can be seen from the printed surface of the printing medium onto which various types of ink are affixed.
The invention can be embodied in a variety of configurations. In addition to the printing device described above, the invention can be embodied in modes such as a printing medium, a computer program in which a printing method is run on a computer, and a recording medium having a recorded program.
Referring now to the attached drawings which form a part of this original disclosure:
Embodiments of the invention are described in the following sequence:
A. Examples
B. Modification examples
A. Examples
The printer 200 has colored ink, a white ink used as a light-shielding ink, and a metallic ink used as a special glossy ink. The colored ink, light-shielding ink, and special glossy ink are affixed onto printing media with different objectives.
The colored ink is used in order to provide the printing medium with color hue. Specifically, this colored ink is required for printing color images and monotone images. In this example, cyan ink, magenta ink, yellow ink, and black ink are used as colored inks. Any of the colored inks can be a pigment-based ink.
The light-shielding ink is used in order to provide the printing medium with light-shielding properties. Specifically, the light-shielding ink is used as a base layer for affixing various inks onto the printing medium. In other words, when the printing medium to which various inks are affixed is viewed from the observation side on which the user observes the image, this ink is formed as the lower-most layer (layer farthest from the user). By affixing the light-shielding ink, for example, onto a transparent printing medium, the printing medium is made non-transparent. An ink containing a pigment such as hollow resin particles or titanium dioxide particles can be used as the light-shielding ink. In this example, white ink containing white pigment is used as the light-shielding ink.
The special glossy ink is used in order to provide the printing medium with special gloss. Specifically, the special glossy ink is a texture-exhibiting ink that contains a pigment that exhibits a special texture. In this example, a metallic ink containing metal pigment that expresses a metallic appearance (e.g., metal foil) is used. The metal pigment, for example, can be formed from aluminum or aluminum alloy and can be produced by grinding metal vapor-deposited film. Other suitable components can be used as the metal pigment in the metallic ink, provided that the composition produces a metallic gloss.
In addition, special glossy inks are also describes as inks whose optical characteristics depend on the reflection angle when printed on the surface of a printing medium. In other words, the appearance (e.g., reflectance, brightness) of the special glossy ink that is affixed to the printing medium surface is different depending on the viewing angle.
A specified operating system is installed on the computer 100. An application program 20 is operated on this operating system. The operating system incorporates a video driver 22 and a printer driver 24. The application program 20, for example, inputs the image data ORG from the digital camera 120. When this occurs, the application program 20 displays the image represented by the image data ORG on a display 114 via the video driver 22. In addition, the application program 20 outputs image data ORG to the printer driver 24. The printer driver 24 then processes the input image data ORG by various methods described below, and the image data that has been processed (also referred to as “processed image data”) is output to the printer 200.
In this embodiment, the image data ORG that is inputted from the digital camera 120 is data that is composed of three color components, red (R), green (G), and blue (B). The application program 20 affixes metal ink data and white ink data as necessary to the image data ORG that has been input from the digital camera 120. Affixing of this white ink data and metallic ink data can be carried out automatically by the application program 20 or in accordance with a command by the user. Of the data that is affixed to the image data ORG, fields in which white ink is affixed to the printing medium are also referred to as “white ink fields,” and fields in which metallic ink is affixed to the printing medium are also referred to as “metallic ink fields.” In addition, fields composed of R, G, B color components is also referred to as “color production fields.”
In this example, the white ink field is automatically set by the application program 20, and the color production field and metallic field are set by the user. The color production fields, for example, are set under instructions from the user as fields within the image data where monochromatic printing or color printing is to be carried out. The metallic fields, for example, are set under instructions from the user as fields in which metallic appearance is to be produced within the image data. In addition, the white ink fields are set as fields in which there is overlap with a field in which one or both of the color production field or and the metallic ink field are positioned in accordance with the application program 20.
The printer driver 24 receives image data ORG from the application program 20 and converts the data to data that can be output to the printer 200. The printer driver 24 includes a preprocessing module 41 for processing the data contained in the image data ORG into appropriate data, a color conversion module 42 for performing color conversion, a color conversion table LUT 1 used for reference during color conversion, a half-tone module 44 for performing multiplexing subsequent to color conversion, a printing control module 45 for converting the multiplexed data into dot data for the respective colored inks, and a printing mode setting part 49 for setting the printing sequence mode.
The preprocessing module 41 includes a field discrimination module 46, an ink volume control module 47, and a selection module 48.
The field discrimination module 46 discriminates overlap between the white ink field and the metallic ink field in the image-forming fields in which the image is to be formed on the printing medium in accordance with the image data ORG that has been input to the printer driver 24. Specifically, the field discrimination module 46 discriminates and specifies the overlap field where the white field for imparting light-shielding properties to the printing medium on which the image is printed and the metallic ink field for producing a metallic appearance overlap. In this overlap field, the white ink field is formed as a base layer, and the metallic ink field is formed on a top part of the base layer.
The ink volume control module 47 sets the ink volume (dot recording ratio) per unit surface area for the white ink in the white ink field based on overlap field discrimination carried out by the field discrimination module 46. Specifically, the ink volume control module 47 sets the ink volume of the white ink in the overlap field to an ink volume (also referred to as “processed white ink volume”) that is lower than the ink volume predetermined in the printer driver 24 based on the image data ORG (“also referred to as normal white ink volume”). In other words, the ink volume control module 47 sets the ink volume of the white ink in the overlap field to an ink volume that is lower than the normal white ink volume determined in accordance with the image data ORG without consideration of overlap fields. In this example, the normal white ink volume is set to 70%, and the processed white ink volume is set to 0%, in other words, zero.
With the selection module 48, the question of whether or not to reduce the ink volume per unit surface area of white ink in overlap fields is determined by the user by viewing the display on the display 114. In other words, the printing system 10 allows printing in two modes: a standard mode in which printing is carried out using the normal white ink volume and a reduction mode in which printing is carried out using the processed white ink volume.
The color conversion module 42 acts on the image data that has been processed by the processing module 41 and converts the respective color components R, G, and B in the color production field of the image data into color components that can be expressed by the printer 200 (cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y), black (K)) in accordance with the color conversion table LUT 1. As a result, the data for the respective color components R, G, and B in the color production field is converted into ink volumes (dot recording ratios) for each ink color to be produced by the printer 200. In this example, the ink volume per unit surface area of metallic ink is set in the printer driver 24 at 30%. The reason that the ink volume of the metallic ink is set to 30% is that the increase in metallic appearance will be nearly unnoticeable if the ink volume exceeds 30%. The ink volume of the metallic ink is not limited to 30%, and can be set to a value such as 10% or 20%. In addition, the ink volume of the metallic ink can be divided into levels (e.g., 10%, 20%, 30%) so that the user can set the ink volume as desired.
The half-tone module 44 carries out half-tone processing in which the gray scale of image data that has been subjected to color conversion by the color conversion module 42 is represented as a dot distribution. In addition, half-tone processing is carried out in accordance with the white ink volume and metallic ink volume set by the application program 20 and the preprocessing module 41. In this example, the well-known ordered dithering method is used for half-tone processing. In addition to ordered dithering methods, error distribution methods, concentration pattern methods, and other half-tone technologies can be used for half-tone processing.
The printing control module 45 rearranges the dot arrangement in the generated dot data to produce order that is to be relayed to the printer 200 and outputs the data to the printer 200 as printing data. In addition, the printing control module 45 outputs various commands such as a start command or print end command to the printer 200, thereby controlling the printer 200.
The printing mode setting part 49 receives user commands concerning which printing sequence mode to carry out from among the first through third printing sequence modes prior to initiation of print processing and sets the printing sequence mode based on commands that have been received.
As shown in
A shown in
As shown in
Next, the specific configuration of the computer 100 that is used as the printing control device will be described.
A disk controller 109 for reading data from a floppy disk 124, compact disk 126, or the like, a peripheral device interface 108 for sending and receiving data with respect to peripheral devices, and a video interface 112 for driving the display 114, are connected to the computer 100. The printer 200 and the hard disk 118 are connected to the peripheral device interface 108. In addition, if a digital camera 120 or color scanner 122 is connected to the peripheral device interface 108, then it will be possible to carry out image processing on images that have been captured by the digital camera 120 or the color scanner 122. In addition, if a network interface card 110 is mounted, then data that has been recorded on a storage device 310 that is connected by a communication line can be acquired by connecting the computer 100 to a communication line 300. The computer 100 acquires image data that is to be printed, and then the printer 200 is controlled through operation of the printer driver 24 described above in order to print the image data.
The configuration of the printer 200 will be described next.
The mechanism for recursively moving the carriage 240 in the axial direction of the platen 236 includes a sliding shaft 233 that is erected parallel to the axis of the platen 236 and slidably supports the carriage 240, a pulley 232 on which an endless drive belt 231 is suspended between the pulley and the carriage motor 230, and a position detection sensor 234 that detects the origin position of the carriage 240.
On the carriage 240 are mounted colored ink cartridges 241 that respectively house magenta ink, yellow ink, and black ink that are used as colored inks. On the carriage 240 also are mounted a metallic ink cartridge 242 for housing a metallic ink, and a white ink cartridge 243 for housing a white ink. Six types of ink discharge heads 244 to 249 corresponding to each of these colors are formed on the printing head 250 on a bottom part of the carriage 240. When the ink cartridges 241, 242, and 243 are mounted from above on the carriage 240, ink can be supplied to the ink discharge heads 244 to 249 from the respective cartridges.
The printing head 250 will be described below.
The nozzles for discharging the ink of each color are arranged in the sub-scan direction on the bottom surface of the printing head 250. Each of the nozzles is disposed every three raster lines in the sub-scan direction, in other words, with a gap of 2 dots. In the drawing, the downwards direction denotes the sub-scan direction (paper feed direction). During printing, the printing location of the printing medium passes first by the nozzles that are represented as being the farthest upward.
As shown in
As shown in
A piezo element is incorporated in each of the nozzles shown in
Control of the printing head 250 described above is carried out by the control circuit 260 of the printer 200 shown in
The printer 200 in this example was described as an ink jet printer for discharging ink droplets towards the printing medium P and thereby forms ink dots. However, the printer can be one that affixes ink to a printing medium using another technique. For example, instead of discharging ink droplets, static electricity can be used in order to attach toner particles to the printing medium, or the printer can take the form of a thermal transfer printer or sublimation type printer. In this example, the ink includes toner particles as well as ink droplets.
Print processing that is carried out by the printing system 10 is described below. Prior to initiation of print processing, the user uses the print setting screen that displays the application program 20 on the display 114 to enter print settings. The user designates the first through third printing sequence modes as print settings and designates the color production fields and metallic fields in the image data ORG.
In the print setting screen 400, the user clicks on the color production field designation icon 403 for the image to be printed on the print image display part 402, and then a mouse pointing device is used in order to designate the color production fields in the image to be printed that is displayed on the print image display part 402. In addition, on the print setting screen 400, the user clicks on the metallic field designation icon 404 for the image to be printed on the print image display part 402 and then uses the mouse to designate the metallic fields in the image to be printed that is displayed on the print image display part 402. After designating a metallic appearance, the printing mode is selected using the printing sequence mode selection part 408. By then pressing the print start button 410, the application program 20 adds information concerning the metallic fields to the RGB format image data, generating supplemented image data in which information related to the white ink field has been automatically added. The supplemented image data is input to the printer driver 24 (
Color conversion processing of the supplemented image data by the color conversion module 42 is then started (step S30). Specifically, the data is converted to CMYK-format image data based on the RGB components contained in the supplemented image data (step S30). Upon obtaining the CMYK-format image data, the half-tone module 44 carries out half-tone processing on the CMYK-format image data (step S40). At this point, the half-tone module 44 carries out half-tone processing on the metallic ink or white ink in addition to the colored ink. Specifically, the half-tone module 44 carries out half-tone processing so that the ink volume of metallic ink in the metallic fields is adjusted to 30%. For the white ink, half-tone processing is carried out so that the ink volume in overlap fields in which a white ink field overlaps with a metallic ink field is adjusted to 0%, and in fields other than overlap fields, half-tone processing is carried out so that the ink volume is adjusted to 70%.
Upon completion of half-tone processing, the printing control module 45 controls the printer 200, and printing is started (step S50). Once printing has started, the printer 200 carries out processing involving the formation of each ink dot (step S60). The processing involving formation of each ink dot is carried out over the entire range in which the image is to be formed on the printing medium in accordance with one of the first through third printing sequence modes that has been set.
If the field discrimination module 46 discriminates that there are no overlap fields (step S220: No), then the ink volume control module 47 sets the ink volume of the white ink to the normal white ink volume (step S240). Processing beginning from step S30 is then carried out (
On the other hand, if the field discrimination module 46 discriminates the presence of an overlap field (step S220: Yes), the selection module 48 allows the user to adjust the ink volume of the white ink in the overlap field to the normal white ink volume (in this example, 70% ink volume) or the processed white ink volume (in this example, 0% ink volume) and allows the user to make a selection via the display 114 (step S230). Specifically, in step S230, the user selects whether to adjust the ink volume of the white ink in the overlap fields to zero.
If the user decides to adjust the white ink volume to the standard ink volume (step S230: NO), then the ink volume control module 47 sets the ink volume of the white ink to the standard ink volume (step S250). Processing is then carried out starting from step S30 (
As shown in
When a metallic layer is formed on a transparent medium that has light-transmissive properties, and a white ink layer is then formed on an upper part thereof; specifically, when the respective layers are formed using the second standard printing sequence mode shown in
As described above, in accordance with the printing system 10 of this example, overlap fields are discriminated by the preprocessing module 41, and the ink volume of white ink in the overlap fields is set to zero (step S260 of
B. Modification Example
Examples of the invention were described above, but the invention is not limited to these examples, and various configurations can be adopted that do not deviate from the scope of the invention. For example, the following types of modifications are possible.
Although, in the above examples, settings involving adjusting the processed white ink volume to 0% (step S260 of
In the examples described above, white ink was used as light-shielding ink, but any ink that has light-shielding properties can be used. For example, gray ink or the like can be used as the light-shielding ink. In the above examples, metallic ink was used as the special glossy ink, but the ink is not restricted thereto, and any ink having special gloss can be used. Examples of inks having special gloss include pearlescent inks containing a pigment in which thin film layers having a pearl color are multiply layered, as with natural pearl, lame inks containing a pigment having fine nonuniformities that manifests a lame or lacquered appearance by scattered reflection when affixed to the surface of a medium. In the examples described above, pigment-based inks were used as the colored inks, but dye-based inks can also be used.
In the examples described above, answering the question of whether to reduce the ink volume of the white ink in overlap fields was carried out by the user with the selection module 48 (step S230 of
The entire disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-089758, filed Apr. 14, 2011 is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
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