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Illustrator Draftsman 3 & 2 - Volume 4 Presentation Graphics
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Retouching

Mechanical   Preparation Introduction The printing process largely determines the quality of reproduction; however, the best machinery available cannot hide the flaws in a poorly constructed mechanical. It is through the mechanical that the DM exerts a direct influence on the resulting print, both in quality and cost. Preparation Before you begin creating artwork for reproduction, you must gather your materials  and  information.  Determine  the  press  operation  involved  and  the materials  to  do  the  job.  Settle  on  a  format,  finished  stock,  and  type  style.  If the  originator  provides  artwork,  it  may  require  cropping,  retouching, eliminating  background  clutter,  or  halftone  screening.  If  you  must  copyfit  or scale artwork, do so before you commit yourself to paper. Cropping Sometimes you use only a specific portion of the original artwork in a finished  product.  Cropping  is  the  procedure  of  defining  the  desired reproduction  image  area  within  a  larger  piece  of  work.  A  simple  method  of cropping uses two right angles cut from opaque paper or board. By maneuvering the two pieces of angled paper, you can frame the desired subject in many different ways. You indicate crop marks on a drawing or photograph by lightly marking the borders of the artwork or print, by marking an overlay attached to the artwork or print, or by cutting a window in an opaque masking paper, such as goldenrod, to expose the desired portion of the artwork or print. Use a grease pencil if you mark on the borders of original artwork so it can be easily removed. Do not mark more than one set of crop marks on the same artwork. Figure 1-31 illustrates the use of cropping arms. Figure 1-31. —Cropping arms. Continued on next page 1-42

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