Why ISO 12647-2 is vital for digital, professional printing

Why ISO 12647-2 is vital for digital, professional printing

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ISO 12647-2 is a printing standard that print suppliers and customers use to ensure that print processes comply with parameters that guarantee quality and consistency.

The digital printing industry has changed massively since 1993, when Xeikon and Indigo introduced the world’s first digital colour printing presses. Perhaps the biggest change over the last three decades is that today’s digital devices are more than able to match offset printing’s output quality. Advances in imaging, print processes, and colourants have made digital colour printing quality concerns a thing of the past.

Consequently, the industry has embraced digital printing in response to changing market requirements. Brand owners and designers want more colour, more frequent job updates, and to produce them in shorter runs. Often working with print service providers, they have developed an amazing array of new applications. Many of these, such as variable data printing, are only possible with direct digital output devices.

ISO 12647-2 provides high-quality, reliable colour

However, colour output quality must still be managed for long or short runs on conventional or digital presses. And process and colour data control are vital for jobs produced using several different printing systems. It’s the only way printers can ensure their work looks identical across print methods and production sites. Print buyers who use multiple printers to produce the same job, or versions of it, need to be able to trust that all prints have a common colour appearance.

That’s not easy, especially in commercial markets where digital printing systems stand shoulder to shoulder with traditional offset litho. But markets are dynamic and clever, and they respond to opportunities. When it comes to proving that digital printing system output is comparable to that of offset, savvy digital print companies have turned to ISO 12647-2 (Graphic technology — Process control for the production of half-tone colour separations, proof and production prints — Part 2: Offset lithographic processes).

This international standard defines requirements for a general printing condition based on:

  • The substrate

  • Colourants

  • Screening

  • Tone Value Increase (TVI, otherwise known as dot gain)

  • The ink sequence

This information is the characterisation data that describes a given printing process, so the stringent requirements of ISO 12647-2 summarise expectations for accurate, high-quality colour production.

ISO 12647-2 is a universal reference

ISO 12647-2 was first published nearly twenty years ago, and over the years, it’s become the universal quality reference for offset printing across the globe. For years, digital printers have embraced it as a universal reference.

The adoption of ISO 12647-2 by digital printers may seem curious, but the standardisation of digital printing has proved elusive: the range of digital printing methods and colourants is just too diverse. In a highly competitive market, it makes sense for digital printing companies to conform to ISO 12647-2. Conformity demonstrates that a properly set up digital printing press can match offset output quality.

This means that print buyers do not have to discuss colour quality with their service providers: conformance to ISO 12647-2 confirms it. Printing companies can instead focus on delivering jobs, confident in their ability to match supplied proofs and output from other ISO 126747-2 compliant printing systems.

Customer satisfaction is guaranteed with ISO 12647-2

Brand owners and print buyers can use ISO 12647-2 compliance as a convenient means of qualifying print service providers when asking for tenders. The standard provides a value add to a printing company’s business that can lead to a wider range of work coming in. It’s a tool that helps printing companies guarantee colour quality and common colour appearance across print runs, leading to less uncertainty, more throughput and improved margins.

portrait of Laurel Brunner

Laurel Brunner

Laurel has been in the graphic arts industry for over 30 years. She works with several ISO working groups and is the convenor of ISO’s Working Group 11. She is also a Visiting Professor at Shenzen Technical University in China and one of a small cohort of Women of Distinction selected by US publishers Output Links.

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