Controlling colour-printed gloss by varnish-halftones

  • Samadzadegan S
  • Baar T
  • Urban P
  • et al.
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Abstract

Printing appearance effects beyond colour - such as gloss - is an active research topic in the scope of multi-layer printing ( 2.5D or 3D printing). Such techniques may enable a perceptually more accurate reproduction of optical material properties and are required to avoid appearance related artefacts sometimes observed in regular colour printing - such as bronzing and differential gloss. In addition to technical challenges of printing such effects, a perceptual space that describes the related visual attributes is crucial; particularly to define perceptually meaningful tolerances and for appearance gamut mapping. In this paper, we focus on spatially-varying gloss created by varnish-halftones. This enables us to print specular gloss effects covering a large portion of the NCS gloss scale from full matte to high gloss. We then conduct a psychophysical experiment to find the relationship between measured specular gloss and a perceptually uniform gloss scale. Our results show that this relationship can be well described by a power function according to Stevens Power Law.

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APA

Samadzadegan, S., Baar, T., Urban, P., Ortiz Segovia, M. V., & Blahová, J. (2015). Controlling colour-printed gloss by varnish-halftones. In Measuring, Modeling, and Reproducing Material Appearance 2015 (Vol. 9398, p. 93980V). SPIE. https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2080805

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