DIGITAL PROOFING METHODS

Digital "soft" or monitor proofing:
• no hard copy; WYSOSISLWYG
• generally not for contract proofing (exceptions:
newspapers; short-run printing)
• OK for remote, first-stage customer approvals

Digital "hard" proofing:
• despite limitations, gaining in popularity
• various methods used
• each is completely filmless
• each uses dyes or pigments, not ink
• most give continuous-tone output because they
can't generate halftone dots as photomechanical
proofs can
• most can't proof to actual printing stock or
comply with SWOP guidelines
• most can't produce full-sized imposition proofs

Some digital proofing technologies:
• laser ablation: the laser "blasts" tiny spots of dye
from a donor sheet to a receptor sheet (Kodak
Approval)
• dye sublimation: CMYK dyes on a ribbon are
vaporized with heat; the proofing stock absorbs
(sublimates) the colored gas
• ink jet: continuous-flow (Iris Realist) and "drop on
demand" (Encad Novajet Pro)
• phase change, a.k.a. thermal wax (Tektronix
Phaser)
• IR thermal laminate: creates halftone dots on a
thermally activated proofing material that can be
exposed in a platesetter (Imation digital
Matchprint) (same device for proof and plate: the
"grail" of the digital workflow)


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