The Print Box
Owner and Production Manager
Fedex Office Jul 2007 - Jul 2009
Lead Project Coordinator
Browning Communications Feb 1999 - Sep 2003
Sales Clerk
Education:
Fairborn High School 1989 - 1993
Skills:
Adobe Creative Suite Graphic Design Dreamweaver Photoshop Posters Brochures Graphics Logo Design Web Design Html Image Manipulation Business Cards Flyers Image Editing Social Media Project Management
Raouf Botros - Centerville OH Michael J. Piatt - Kettering OH
Assignee:
Scitex Digital Printing, Inc. - Dayton OH
International Classification:
G10D 1100
US Classification:
347100
Abstract:
In a continuous ink jet printing system, bleed and pullback are minimized by selecting an ink set having a particular print order, with each ink having its components selected to equalize the surface tensions of the inks. By equalizing the surface tensions, the percentage of density of the primary ink which can be printed increases, thereby increasing the secondary and tertiary color gamut.
Continuous Tone Reproduction Using Improved Ink Jet Droplet Dispersion Techniques
William R. Bitticker - Centerville OH Michael J. Piatt - Kettering OH
Assignee:
Scitex Digital Printing, Inc. - Dayton OH
International Classification:
B41J 2205
US Classification:
347 15, 358502, 358521, 347 14
Abstract:
A method for improving tone reproduction in a digital printing system is provided. First, an image to be printed is defined. The image will have areas of minimal ink density and areas of medium to high ink density. A randomized dot placement scheme is used for dispersing ink drops in the minimal ink density areas of the image. An ordered structure scheme is used for dispersing ink drops in the medium to high ink density areas of the image.
Image File Data Equivalence Algorithms Respective To Output Devices
Michael J. Piatt - Dayton OH Terry Wozniak - Springfield OH Joshua H. Howard - Kettering OH
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
B41F 1324
US Classification:
101484, 358 19
Abstract:
The present invention provides a method for reproducing image data from a press output on another device. The present invention mimics color, resolution and frequency of dots used by varying the color saturation (amplitude) of the dots used to mimic the defining characteristics of the source output. By allowing adjustments in both frequency and amplitude to vary from the original output device, it becomes possible to match the resolution and color of the source device.
Michael J. Piatt - Dayton OH, US Terry Wozniak - Springfield OH, US Joseph Mangan - Granger IN, US
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
G06K009/00
US Classification:
382167, 382165, 345590, 358518, 358520, 358525
Abstract:
A system and method are proposed for the printing of all possible colors, including all permutations of primary inks used to make processed colors, in equal increments and of a size easily measurable with a device that will convert the colors into standard color coordinates. These colors are categorized and used to determine the ability of the output device to reproduce a source color. Each color printed within the gamut of an output device is identified and correlated to independent color coordinates. The primary color recipe necessary to reproduce a reference color within the gamut of the output device is identified. The magnitude of deviation of out of gamut source colors is determined, and the closest in gamut colors are specified through methods of interpolation and nearest neighbor. Furthermore, the alteration in gamut size can be predicted based upon image manipulation processes associated with the workflow. Source colors can be correlated to the altered destination gamut in order to determine the recipe of in gamut colors.
Michael J. Piatt - Dayton OH, US Christopher L. Watkins - Fairborn OH, US
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
H04N001/407
US Classification:
358 326, 358521, 382275
Abstract:
The present invention addresses problems encountered in the conversion of continuous tone data into binary data for printing on low resolution imaging systems. Representation of the continuous tone data is only roughly approximated through the conversion to binary data. Artifacts of the binary printing process are objectionable for several reasons. They decrease over all image quality and may sometimes allow for only partial representation of the original data. Partially formed and/or irregularly formed text characters are one such example. This invention addresses this problem by forcing certain levels to be processed through predictable dot dispersion patterns so as to preserve pre-identified portions of the input data stream. Continuous tone image data for imaging on a digital output device is processed by identifying at least one problematic tone level in the binary representation of the image, and identifying at least one non-problematic tone level in the binary representation of the image. Data transformation is then applied to cause the digital output device to replace the at least one problematic tone level in the binary representation of the image with output at the at least one non-problematic tone level in the binary representation of the image.
Michael J. Piatt - Dayton OH, US Terry Wozniak - Springfield OH, US Christopher L. Watkins - Fairborn OH, US
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
G06F 15/00 G03F 3/08 G06K 9/00
US Classification:
358 19, 358520, 382165
Abstract:
The present invention addresses the quantification of a printed tone scale for each individual color in a printing system, developing a linear tone scale derived in an independent color space and referenced from the shade of the unprinted substrate. The present invention determines the threshold for excessive ink coverage of a printing system on a specified substrate. This determination is based on a subjective evaluation of acceptable thresholds for bleed, cockle, show through, and image density. The method works in conjunction with a predefined test pattern printed on the specified substrate at fixed printing parameters, such as speed, dryer temperature, and web tension. This invention also includes an ability to limit the ink of each independent color in the system as a fraction of the total upper ink limit. Furthermore, this invention allows calibration of the tone scale of each color in the system using the color of the paper as a reference point. In addition, this invention facilitates the generation of separate sets of tone scale transformations for both graphics and text for each color in the system.
Michael J. Piatt - Dayton OH, US Terry Wozniak - Springfield OH, US Joseph P. Mangan - Granger IN, US
Assignee:
Eastman Kodak Company - Rochester NY
International Classification:
H04N 1/40
US Classification:
358 31, 358 309
Abstract:
A system and method are provided for linearizing the tone scale of individual colors in a multi-color printing system, by deriving a prescribed tone scale of individual colors in a single or multi-color printing system. Full linear ink gradations are printed on multiple substrates, and a linearization table is generated with multiple points for each of the multiple substrates and/or ink gradations. A polynomial curve is fitted to the points of each linearization table to generate polynomial curves. At least one point in the polynomial curves is selected, that shows high variation from one curve to a next curve, and coefficients of a group of polynomial curves are plotted as functions of the value of the at least one point. The range of prediction can be as narrow or as broad as an application requires. Finally, a prescribed tone scale table is derived from the polynomial curves and the at least one point.
The present invention provides for the creation and use of a non-linearized, paper specific, digital workflow independent color profile which can be used to create proofs based on the raw output data of the source process. Such a profile would have the advantage of not having to have account for the intermediate workflow steps such as linearization, color correction, sharpening, ink limiting, color separation, dithering or color transformation because the gamut mapping would utilize the discrete output tones of the resulting data sent to the source device.
Googleplus
Michael Piatt
Work:
McDonald's - Schlep
Education:
Fairborn High School
Tagline:
Hello all you +'ers out there.. look at that I just created a new term...
Michael Piatt
Education:
Oklahoma State University College of Engineering, Architecture, and Technology - Engineering