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Screenprinting
Today: The Basics
PREPARING ART
FOR SCREENPRINTING
By Andy
MacDougall.
© 1999 MacDougall Screen Printing Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission
The original art or design to be printed can come in many forms, but must eventually be converted to a stencil image on the screen. In screen printing, only one color can be printed at one time, and so multicolored print
jobs require a separate piece of film to create each color's stencil when working with photostencils. When we talk about art for screen printing, we really mean three different things:
1.
The Original Art or
Design
This can be in
the form of a sketch, a layout on a computer, a painting or drawing,
a typewritten rough, or a finished camera-ready design.
- From this original you can determine what you are going to print, the size, location on the substrate, and number of colors required to reproduce the image.
- Decide at
this point if the art is reproducible or usable for screen
printing. Some images just won't work, or become too expensive or
difficult to reproduce. A good screenprinter should develop the
skills to identify problem prints when they first see the job, not
after they tried printing it.
- Remember,
most clients won't know the difference between many print
processes, and may not understand why that multicolored logo their
kid designed using crayons or a low-end graphics program will be
impossible to color separate without a big outlay of cash. Be
gentle, but don't be afraid to say no. The best designers and
artists know the criteria for the particular media, and design
accordingly, not the other way around.
2.
Mechanical
Art
This is an interim art step where the elements of the design are composed or laid out with proper type, artwork is changed to camera-ready images, or, in the case of continuous-tone or full-color originals, scanned
as digital information in a computer. At the end of this stage, all design elements are in place relative to each other, colors have been separated to individual overlays or plates, in register, and trapping considerations where colors meet have been built in.
The term camera ready is used to describe the art at the end of this step. With the mass conversion to computers for graphic prep, some of this type of terminology will find itself up on the shelf, along with 'paste-up', 'silkscreen', and 'typesetter.'
- The term ' refers to the physical re-scaling and building of the separate color plates, with type and halftone photos. In the old days of paste-up and camera shots, this was done as separate steps, and then laid out on a board with overlays, ready for the darkroom.
3.
FILM
POSITIVE
A film positive carries an opaque image on a transparent film, which is identical to the image to be printed. This film is used to expose a stencil.
ART PRINTERS TAKE NOTE: I'm not ignoring the ability to draw directly on the screen with resist, rip paper and stick it under the screen, cut water soluble handcut stencils, or use other methods to make screenprinting stencils as a way of creating unique screenprinted works of art. But that's a sign that you probably want to stay 'improvisational.' There's more on this in the 'Screens and Stencils,' but not a lot. Sorry.
LET'S LOOK AT EACH STEP IN MORE DETAIL.
ORIGINAL ART OR DESIGN
- Line drawings (or line art, which is art or type with no tonal shading) should be in black on white, regardless of the final color.
- Photos or works of art need to be scanned (digitized) to prepare them for conversion to halftone art, or separation for printing process color. Alternatively, you can use a process camera and convert the images using halftone filters. This is how they used to do it, and it is a disappearing skill. Although process cameras can match a scan for quality, and win hands down for price, digital film production is becoming more popular because designers can transfer art files directly, change elements quickly, and processing chemicals inherent in photo-based film are eliminated. Nearly all modern graphics prepress equipment and training is centered around digital technology.
NOTE: To reproduce tonal
variations in most types of printing, it is necessary to convert the
gray scales of continuous tone photos to a screen of small dots,
which fool the eye into thinking it sees a gray area even though the
print color is black. They use these dots to print multicolor as
well. This is called FOUR COLOR PROCESS, or
CYMK if
you were raised by a computer. Look at the color funnies, and then
look at a magazine photo with a magnifying glass. Depending on the
tonal value of an area, the dots are smaller or larger, or more
concentrated. One of the major drawbacks to screenprinting compared
to other printing methods is its physical limitations in the
reproduction of fine halftone dots.
- Typesetting
and layout is now easily done on a computer, either in the shop,
in the home, or by a designer.
- If you are
an artist and directly creating a screenprinted fine art piece,
hand painting, inking, and hand-cutting can be done directly on
clear mylar, acetate, or rubylith, skipping the mechanical art
stage. Even if you are working this way, you will probably want to
draw a sketch at size to figure out elements of the design.
MECHANICAL
ART
- The computer
has now overtaken the drafting or layout table as the workstation
of choice in screen shops.
- Most PCs and
all Macs have graphic and layout capabilities, so that designs can
be completely laid out, corrected, proofed, and OK'd before
producing final film.
- Programs
such as Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator, PageMaker, Photoshop, etc.
allow all the old functions of typesetting, enlargement and
reduction using a process camera, paste-up, masking, and producing
overlays to be done by one person at one computer workstation.
- Keep in
mind, there is still a place for some traditional methods, even in
the most modern art department. Large flat areas of color are
still more economically produced using knife-cut rubylith film.
The need for this type of overlay is determined at the mechanical
stage, but cut using the final film as the layout guide.
- All work
should be thoroughly proofed at this stage before producing final
film.
At the end of
this step Quality Control Check for:
- missing components
- Multicolor plates are registered to each other
- Trapping and color printing order have been determined
FILM
POSITIVES
- Remember,
the image on the film will be the image on the
stencil, which will be the
final printed image! Mistakes don't
disappear in screen printing, they get magnified.
- Make sure
the film you are using has enough density of black. Just because
it looks black doesn't mean it will block light.
- Positive
images are used in making screenprinting stencils. Negatives are
used in offset platemaking. Make sure you specify
a film positive when ordering film from a reprographics
or design firm.
Film
positives can be made using the following methods:
- Litho
film,
which is the traditional way of producing large format film. Litho
film is shot in a process camera and produces a negative of
whatever is shot, as line art (no gray). Usually a smaller
negative is produced from an original layout, and then a
'blow-back' or enlargement is shot from the negative, which
becomes a positive (positive art >internegative >positive
film). The film is processed in a developer and stop bath. It is
inexpensive, but must be processed in a darkroom using
chemicals.
- PMT or
stat camera, where the image is
shot on a paper throw-away negative and transferred to a special
treated film by running both materials through a developer bath
and a set of rollers. This system was quicker and simpler when
introduced in the 1960's, and replaced litho film in design and
print shops when smaller format (up to 18" x24") film was
required. Most shops have switched to computer technology and both
the above systems (using cameras) have declined in use over the
last five to 10 years.
- Linotronic, or digital
film.
Usually output by a specialized color sep company, or a film
output service, or in-house in larger screen and offset shops.
This film is produced from digital images created on computer
programs and modemed or supplied to the output device on disc. The
output devices are expensive, but produce very accurate and dense
film, and are integrated with high end laser scanners to do high
quality process and halftone work. This type of film is
now industry standard.
- Laser
printer using specially treated mylar. Very popular with
small shops using computers for layout. Inexpensive and fast, but
not super high quality. As long as the laser printer is good and
has high resolution, this system is probably acceptable for 90% of
average screen jobs, as long as the size isn't an issue.
- Inked by
hand on mylar or acetate, or knife or computer cut on
rubylith. Only suitable for
specific applications or flat color areas. For the fine artist,
this method allows the use of familiar tools (rapidograph style
tech pens, conte or litho crayons, certain pencils or markers,
brushes, etc.) to be used to create a drawing that can then be
exposed directly, without secondary processing.
- Thermal
or inkjet digital printers. Cheaper than high-end
linotronic, with quality that is not noticeably different, many
shops are switching to this as affordable in-house film production
technology. These types of printers are available in wider and
wider formats every year, and can be driven with regular computers
and minimal software outlay.
Tips &
Tidbits
- When
ordering any film for screen printing, specify right reading emulsion
up film positive.
- When
ordering large blowups from smaller mechanical layouts, it is
necessary to communicate the final size to the camera operator.
This is communicated as a percentage.
An easy way
to determine exact enlargement or reduction percentages is to measure
the width or the height of the original and the width or height of
the final desired size, then divide to find the desired percentage.
Here's how:
Original
width 9.5 inches. Desired width 12 inches.
Divide 9.5 into 12 to
determine the enlargement percentage. (1.26 = 126%)
Divide 12
into 9.5 to determine a reduction percentage (.79 = 79%)
- This works
when you know any two dimensions from the original and the
finished size. The percentage can be multiplied by any other known
measurement on an image to determine corresponding size on a
finished piece.
- 100% is the
same size, less than 100% is a reduction, and more than 100% is an
enlargement.
- Film is very
delicate, and should be handled with care and kept clean at all
times.
- Film should
be examined carefully before use for flaws, scratches,
misalignment or mis-register, and corrected either with opaque
touch-up, or by reshooting.
- Films for
screenprinting can be stripped together with other pieces of film
using clear tape to make larger images, or add elements to
existing film.
- Opaquing
pens, available from a graphic supply shop, are really handy.
Blockout tuche can be applied by brush, and is water soluble so it
can easily be removed.
- A NOTE
ABOUT GRAPHIC SUPPLIES: I don't want to start
any arguments, but it has been my observation over the years that
many of the best materials are available from commercial graphic
suppliers or screenprint supply houses. Screenprinting materials
available from fine art stores tend to be hobby grade, limited in
selection, and don't do a good job past a
certain point. If you are
serious about what you are doing - and hey, you've read this far-
always seek out the best materials you can afford, coupled with
good advice.
NEW TECHNOLOGY IN THE
SCREEN ART DEPARTMENT
Computers
The
only way to fly. One skilled operator with around $5,000 worth of
hardware and software can deliver 90% of an average screen shop's art
needs in less time and for less money than was ever imagined even 10
years ago. Goodbye cameras, typesetters, paste-up, and stripping.
Hello hard drive crashes, corrupt files, and yearly equipment
upgrades.
Direct
Projection
Small scale negatives are
enlarged and projected directly on the coated screen. Eliminates
costly full-size film, vacuum frame for exposure, and a few
traditional steps in the process.
Digital Ink
Jet and Thermal Imaging Positives
Print full size positives
directly from computer, using an opaque ink jet plotter on a
transparent film media. Advantage is no developing chemicals, no
darkroom, and it's affordable enough for small operations because it
runs on existing graphic computer programs.
Digital Ink
Jet Direct to Screen
Prints image with water
soluble opaque ink directly from the graphic files to the coated
screen. Eliminates the need for film positives, vacuum frame for
exposure, and even more traditional steps. This the equivalent to
'direct-to-plate' in offset printing.
Note from
the Author:
I hope you
have enjoyed this months section. If any readers have questions,
comments or suggestions, please forward them to andy.squeeg@shaw.ca and I'll try and
respond. Next month, come back to ART2U to read all about SCREENS
& STENCILS. In the meantime, keep your squeegee sharp!
Andy
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