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Lisa5193
Known Participant
September 23, 2019
Question

halftone (tint) dot pattern swatches

  • September 23, 2019
  • 7 replies
  • 10227 views

I am looking for dot screen fill patterns for Illustrator—from 10% to 100% of black (or a spot color) to simulate silk screening at 720dpi. I would like to be able to MOCK UP a 1 color design with tints on a colored tee. This is the concept of what I need: https://halftone.us, but it isn't accurate like what AccuRIP would produce. I don't have AccuRIP, but that is what my printing vendor uses. I would like to find fill patterns that look like the attached image.

 

Simply using tints in the color swatch panel doesn't work, because the color of the "shirt" doesn't show through between the dots—because there are no "dots." "Basic Graphics_Dots" that comes wtih Illustrator isn't the right dpi.

 

 

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    7 replies

    Ton Frederiks
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019

    The DPI is the RIP or Printer resolution, that does give you no information about the LPI.

    It can be very small dots (high LPI) or coarse dots (more likely for screen print.

     

    Ton Frederiks
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019

    And at what LPI (lines per inch) are the dots produced?

    Lisa5193
    Lisa5193Author
    Known Participant
    September 23, 2019
    I'm not sure about LPI, but it's 720 DPI. See if image attached to original post answers the question? It's what the t-shirt printer gave me to help me understand screens for a 1 color job.
    barbara_a7746676
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019
    LPI or DPI -- that makes a huge difference. The Illustrator dots are LPI. That is, there are, in my example, 5 lines of dots per inch.
    Ton Frederiks
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019

    You could try a greyscale rasterize effect and use the ColorHalftone with the same angles.

     

     

    Lisa5193
    Lisa5193Author
    Known Participant
    September 23, 2019
    I had tried this, but I need to mathematically get to the DPI.
    Participating Frequently
    September 23, 2019
    Lisa5193
    Lisa5193Author
    Known Participant
    September 23, 2019
    Thanks, these are more "artsy" than the "real silkscreen simulation" I need. I need to show a client how tints translate to actual screened spot colors on a silkscreened t-shirt.
    barbara_a7746676
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019

    Maybe this will work for you.

    You could get a head start by using the dot patterns that come with Illustrator. Draw a rectangle and fill with one of the patterns. For example, this rectangle is filled with 60% Illustrator dot.

    Then double click on the Scale tool to bring up the Scale dialog box.

    Put a check mark on Transform Patterns and uncheck Transform Objects, and enter a scale percentage that works for you.

    Lisa5193
    Lisa5193Author
    Known Participant
    September 23, 2019

    ...and then I can recolor the artwork to the spot color I need (use 1 color job preset)! Now I just need to figure out the math to get these to 720dpi. Thanks!

    barbara_a7746676
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    September 23, 2019
    You could draw a one inch rectangle and fill it, for example, with the Illustrator 60% dot. I count 5 dots per inch for Illustrator 60% dot. Divide 5 by 720 (the dots per inch that you need) to get the ratio. Then multiply by 100 to get the percentage to type into the Scale dialog box.
    Participating Frequently
    September 23, 2019

    Start with Swatch Pattern and create your own > Modify pattern to simulate tighter resolution. 

    Participating Frequently
    September 23, 2019

    You could try using:

    Lisa5193
    Lisa5193Author
    Known Participant
    September 23, 2019
    Thanks, but see last sentence of my post. Not enough dpi.