METHOD OF PRINTING WITH GLOSS CONTROL
20200031150 · 2020-01-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C64/112
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41L23/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/2114
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J3/407
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method of printing a color surface of an object by printing dots of curable ink in several superposed layers includes defining a micro-texture, the micro-texture being a repetitive pattern of elevated parts and depressed parts; establishing a gloss function that indicates a gloss value of a surface having the micro-texture, as a function of a height difference between a maximum height of the elevated parts and a minimum height of the depressed parts of the micro-texture; assigning a target gloss value to at least a part of a surface area of the object; determining, on the basis of the gloss function, a required local height difference corresponding to the target gloss value; and forming, on the at least a part of a surface area of the object, the micro-texture with a height profile scaled to the required local height difference.
Claims
1. A method of printing a color surface of an object by printing dots of curable ink in several superposed layers, the method comprising the steps of: defining a micro-texture, the micro-texture being a repetitive pattern of elevated parts and depressed parts; establishing a gloss function that indicates a gloss value of a surface having said micro-texture, as a function of a height difference between a maximum height of the elevated parts and a minimum height of the depressed parts of the micro-texture; assigning a target gloss value to at least a part of a surface area of the object; determining, on the basis of the gloss function, a required local height difference corresponding to the target gloss value; and forming, on said at least a part of the surface area of the object, the micro-texture with a height profile scaled to the required local height difference.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the elevated parts take the form of pillars that have a uniform height and a uniform cross-sectional shape over an entire height of the pillars thereof, and the depressed parts take the form of gaps between the pillars.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the elevated parts have a size in a range from p to 350 m, when p is a size of a single pixel that is printable in a print process in which the object is formed.
4. The method according to claim 2, wherein the elevated parts take the form of square pillars with a size of 22 pixels.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the gloss function is established based on a gloss measurement of the micro-texture with various height differences.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein a continuous color layer is formed on top of the micro-texture.
7. The method according to claim 6, wherein a composition of colorants constituting a color appearance of the color layer is incorporated in the gloss function.
8. The method according to claim 7, wherein a quadratic relation between a gloss value and colorant composition for a fixed height difference is applied in a multidimensional gloss function.
9. The method according to claim 6, wherein the height difference is modulated across the color surface to enhance a uniformity of a gloss appearance of a full color surface.
10. A software product comprising program code on a machine-readable non-transitory medium, the program code, when loaded into a controller of a printer, causing the controller to perform the method according to claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] Embodiment examples of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0023] As is shown in
[0024] The print head 10 is controlled by a print controller 16. The print controller 16 communicates with a user interface 18 where a user can specify among others the desired shape of the three-dimensional object 12, the surface color or colors of that object, as well as the desired surface gloss of the object.
[0025] The printed object 12 has a core 20 that is formed by several superposed layers of cured ink and defines the three-dimensional shape of the object. In the example shown, the object has a flat top surface area 22 surrounded by sloped surface areas 24 and relatively small side faces 26 that extend normal to the plane of the substrate 14.
[0026] In order to reduce the surface gloss of the object 12, micro-textures 28, 30 have been formed on the flat top surface area 22 and on each of the sloped surface areas 24. The micro-textures 28, 30, which have been shown in cross-section in
[0027] In the example shown, an ink in an arbitrary color has been used for forming the core 20 of the object 12, whereas the elevated parts of the micro-textures 28, 30 and 32 are formed by white ink. The color appearance of the object is determined by a continuous color layer 36 of colored ink.
[0028] In another embodiment, a continuous color layer may be formed on the surface of the core 20, and the micro-textures 28, 30 may be formed of transparent ink.
[0029]
[0030] In example A, the elevated parts, represented by black squares, have a size of 5656 m, which is the size of a single pixel in case of a print resolution of 450 dpi. The depressed parts are formed by continuous gaps that separate the pillars and each have also a width of 56 m. Thus, an elementary cell 38 of the repetitive pattern has a size of 112112 m.
[0031] In the example B, the pillars and the elementary cell have the same size, but the elevated parts and the depressed parts form a checkerboard pattern.
[0032] In example C, the elementary cell 38 has a size of 44 pixel and the number of pillars per surface area has been reduced.
[0033] In example D, the elementary cell 38 has a size of 42 pixel.
[0034] Examples E-L show patterns in which the pillars (elevated parts 32) have more complex shapes and/or larger dimensions. For example, the pillars in the examples G, H, and I have a size of 22 pixel. As has been illustrated by examples F and L, the pattern may also be anisotropic, so that the gloss may be different in two mutually orthogonal directions.
[0035] Experiments have hinted to the preliminary result that the pattern shown in examples G and I, with square pillars of 22 pixels in an elementary cell 38 of 33 pixels for G and square pillars of 22 pixels in an elementary cell of 36 pixels for I, are particularly useful.
[0036] In experiments, the gloss of surface areas with the micro-textures shown in
[0037] A number of steps of an embodiment example of the method according to the invention have been indicated in a flow diagram in
[0038] Steps S1 and S2 are preparatory steps in which a pattern of the micro-texture to be used is defined (e.g. the pattern of example I in
[0039] In step S3, the process of printing the three-dimensional object 12 starts with reading (or calculating) the 3D data of that object, comprising shape, color and gloss. Then, in step S4, a surface area, e.g. 22, is selected for which a specific target gloss value Gt shall be achieved. The color is processed in a color management module to obtain the CMYK-components for printing the color in step S5a. In parallel, the target gloss value is assigned to the surface area in step S5b. By knowing both the target gloss and the CMYK components, it is possible to determine the necessary height difference. Step S6 is a step of determining the corresponding height difference H by means of the gloss function 40, as shown in
[0040] The core 20 of the object 12 is printed in step S8 and the micro-texture 28 and/or 30 is printed in step S9, and the color layer 36 is printed in step S10, which completes the print process.
[0041] The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.