Angles at which screens are placed with relation to one another to avoid undesirable moiré patterns. The most common angles are black, 45 degrees, magenta 75 degrees, yellow 90 degrees, and cyan 105 degrees.
In color reproduction, angles at which the halftone screens are placed with relation to one another, to avoid undesirable moire patters.
The angle of a halftone. Using overlapping screen requires appropriate angles to avoide Moire.
The angle at which the halftone screens are placed in relation to one another.
The angle of the imaginary "grid" of dots that make up a HALFTONE pattern. When different halftones are printed on top of one another (such as is done for all color printing), the halftone angles of each color must be different in order to prevent a MOIRE.
when printing multiple colors, each color has to be printed at a certain angle to avoid the creation of moire patterns.
The angle at which a screen is rotated for printing. The angle affects the way the way the halftone dots are laid down on each separation film. If the dots do not align correctly, moiré patterns appear when the films are placed on top of one another.
Angle of the front windscreen from vertical.
The degree of rotation at which a halftone screen is printed. Each element in a four-color separation must be reproduced with a screen that has been placed at a specific angle to eliminate moiré patterns when the colors are superimposed. Black is normally 45 degrees, magenta at 75 degrees, cyan at 105 degrees, and yellow at 90 degrees. Precise alignment is required.
In printing continuous tones (e.g. colours and greyscales) are simulated by patterns of dots, called screens. The rows of dots are applied at different angles less noticeable to the eye. In four colour printing these angles are: Black 45°, Cyan 105°, Magenta 75° and Yellow 90
Angle at which halftone screens or screen tints for each colour are printed in relation to one another to avoid moire patterns. Angles normally used are black 45°, magenta 75°, yellow 90°, cyan 105°.
The angle in which a process color is rotated so that the visual observation of a pattern or moirþí© is not present. to top
Angle of the rows of dots in a screen tint or half tone.
With regular screens the angle of the screen from the vertical. When single colors are used, the screen is generally positioned diagonally (45 or 135 degrees). In multicolor printing, different screen angles should be used for different colors in order to prevent overlay effects (moiré). DIN 16547 prescribes angles of 0, 15, 75 and 45 degrees for the colors yellow, magenta, cyan and black.
(n) The alignment angle of dots in halftone images. The angle of the dots in an image, especially when multiple screens are being used, is critical for avoiding illusionary and otherwise unwanted secondary patterns from appearing in the printed image.
In offset printing, the screen angle is the angle at which the halftones of a separated color is output to a lithographic film, hence, printed on final product media.