Thoughts on color prints.
- jcapriotti
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Thoughts on color prints.
We use color on our drawings and the also create the associated PDFs in color. Dimensions, hidden lines, notes are all a different color while the part itself is black. We also show shaded views in some cases if it helps.
Our global parent company is trying to standardize all divisions worldwide and the other countries insist that everything should be black and white line drawings. I can't find anything in ASME standards regarding color, not sure about ISO standards. Since CAD systems now allow shaded views, it seems like printing in color is acceptable and enhances readability IMO. We do choose darker colors that print well on white paper and also print well on black and white printers.
What does your company do?
Example:
Our global parent company is trying to standardize all divisions worldwide and the other countries insist that everything should be black and white line drawings. I can't find anything in ASME standards regarding color, not sure about ISO standards. Since CAD systems now allow shaded views, it seems like printing in color is acceptable and enhances readability IMO. We do choose darker colors that print well on white paper and also print well on black and white printers.
What does your company do?
Example:
Jason
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
We solely print in black and white and are trying to be environmentally friendly by printing on both sides of the sheet whenever possible. Conversely, I do agree that color does improve the readability of complicated and busy drawings. I believe that line width (thickness) is part of the CAD standards, but don't know about color printing/plotting.
You miss 100% of the shots you don't take - Wayne Gretzky
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
We've been using colors for a long time.
notes/dims/annotations in blue
edges in black
hidden and rev balloons in red
sometimes iso view in color
Shop floor production used to >view< the actual drawing file (solid edge .dft) in full color but now we had to switch to pdfs, also color.
Hard copies are uncontrolled docs and for ref only.
notes/dims/annotations in blue
edges in black
hidden and rev balloons in red
sometimes iso view in color
Shop floor production used to >view< the actual drawing file (solid edge .dft) in full color but now we had to switch to pdfs, also color.
Hard copies are uncontrolled docs and for ref only.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Back in the 90's my autocad prints had color. I still think it makes it easier to read. Then I spent 20 years at a company that did only black and white. I always assumed that was driven by a standard, so that's what I've adopted here, although shaded views are in color.
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- Glenn Schroeder
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Until two weeks ago I had been using a fairly dark for dimensions, and any annotations with a leader going to the drawing view. Everything else was black. I believe that made the drawings easier to decipher when you can tell at a glance waht's a model edge and what's a dimension leader.
I only use shaded views to show rebar, and not always then, but it's occasionally difficult to decipher what's going on with rebar without an isometric view with the bars different colors (notes are black for those views). I don't like to use colors unless it's necessary because of the mean nasty things it does the the file size when saving as PDF.
Now everything has to be black for 508 compliance. It torques me off, but whatcha gonna do?
I only use shaded views to show rebar, and not always then, but it's occasionally difficult to decipher what's going on with rebar without an isometric view with the bars different colors (notes are black for those views). I don't like to use colors unless it's necessary because of the mean nasty things it does the the file size when saving as PDF.
Now everything has to be black for 508 compliance. It torques me off, but whatcha gonna do?
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Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I saw a drawing in previous forum several years back. The moment I saw the drawing, I was convinced we should go for colored drawing. Now all of our drawings are colored.
This is a copy of the drawing I saw in previous forum.
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This is a copy of the drawing I saw in previous forum.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Color is not part of ASME standard AFAIK
my 3cents:
I tend to avoid color whenever possible.
The only 2 situation where i used color (that i can think of now) is:
1. Calling out surface finish requirement on a specific surface (both in CAD and drawing, normally is a separate view in drawing)
2. Use to indicate 2nd shot/overmold material
In both case, i always make sure the constrast/color is well adjusted so that they can still be interpret regardless whether the drawing is printed in black and white or color
The last thing you need is to send some supplier your color pdf and they misinterpret it because they print in black and white.
Also, you never know whether the one reading your print is having any color vision deficiency (colour blindness) or not (sometimes even they themselves dint realize they are color blind)
my 3cents:
I tend to avoid color whenever possible.
The only 2 situation where i used color (that i can think of now) is:
1. Calling out surface finish requirement on a specific surface (both in CAD and drawing, normally is a separate view in drawing)
2. Use to indicate 2nd shot/overmold material
In both case, i always make sure the constrast/color is well adjusted so that they can still be interpret regardless whether the drawing is printed in black and white or color
The last thing you need is to send some supplier your color pdf and they misinterpret it because they print in black and white.
Also, you never know whether the one reading your print is having any color vision deficiency (colour blindness) or not (sometimes even they themselves dint realize they are color blind)
Far too many items in the world are designed, constructed and foisted upon us with no understanding-or even care-for how we will use them.
- Frederick_Law
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
First setup lineweight properly.
Dimension lines are thinner then model edge. 0.005 and 0.010 works good.
Change the SW gray to black. It's difficult to read in color or B/W.
Mostly black and while. Color when needed.
Make sure it's black and white compatible. Whoever received the drawing may not have color printer.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I like using color to help separate dimensions and notes from geometry. BUT, a drawing should always be readable if rendered in black-and-white.
- mattpeneguy
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I like to use colors in these ranges for my annotations:
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
20 years ago, color printing would have been too expensive! Technically today the cost of color printing really hasn't come down that much!SPerman wrote: ↑Fri Jul 22, 2022 2:23 pm Back in the 90's my autocad prints had color. I still think it makes it easier to read. Then I spent 20 years at a company that did only black and white. I always assumed that was driven by a standard, so that's what I've adopted here, although shaded views are in color.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
There are many reasons not to use color in legal engineering documentation. Let's just cover a few quickly.
1. Color blindness- Statistics show 1-12 male humans have a form of color blindness. With a heavy male dominated industry color blindness is an even higher ratio.- Someone can miss content on drawings.
2. Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
3. Cost of color printing is still quite high compared to B/W and grayscale.
4. Prety sure but someone else can confirm- you need to use b/w prints for all patent work- for all the reasons above.
Either go b/w or go paperless and implement MBE (enterprise). Then you can do what you want to the PMI. :-)
1. Color blindness- Statistics show 1-12 male humans have a form of color blindness. With a heavy male dominated industry color blindness is an even higher ratio.- Someone can miss content on drawings.
2. Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
3. Cost of color printing is still quite high compared to B/W and grayscale.
4. Prety sure but someone else can confirm- you need to use b/w prints for all patent work- for all the reasons above.
Either go b/w or go paperless and implement MBE (enterprise). Then you can do what you want to the PMI. :-)
- mattpeneguy
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I was dealing with that with Autocad today. The layer I was using was yellow and it wouldn't print to pdf in B&W. It was completely illegible on the screen, let alone printed.Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 4:11 pm There are many reasons not to use color in legal engineering documentation. Let's just cover a few quickly.
1. Color blindness- Statistics show 1-12 male humans have a form of color blindness. With a heavy male dominated industry color blindness is an even higher ratio.- Someone can miss content on drawings.
2. Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
3. Cost of color printing is still quite high compared to B/W and grayscale.
4. Prety sure but someone else can confirm- you need to use b/w prints for all patent work- for all the reasons above.
Either go b/w or go paperless and implement MBE (enterprise). Then you can do what you want to the PMI. :-)
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I use a few colors and I think it helps. Costs more to print, but in the lifecycle of a drawing, that doesn't even register.
If I want to learn something, I find a resource in color. If I want to teach something, I present the concepts with color. If a reader has a hint of doubt about a drawing, I want it to look like it came from a human and for the question to get asked.
For example, if you ever want to teach someone the Discrete Fourier Transform, start here: https://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/20 ... -ffts.html
For me the drawing is a tool that communicates intent, not a legal document. I do respect color blindness in my color choices for lines/notes, and I pick colors that are readable on white paper if any one of the black, cyan, magenta, and yellow are busted.
If I ever needed something more rigorous, I'd use colors from Paul Tol's "bright" palette (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages ... references), list the colors with their RGB codes in the title block, and make some handwavy statement that the use of the document implies the ability to distinguish those colors, and otherwise to request a more accessible version.
If I want to learn something, I find a resource in color. If I want to teach something, I present the concepts with color. If a reader has a hint of doubt about a drawing, I want it to look like it came from a human and for the question to get asked.
For example, if you ever want to teach someone the Discrete Fourier Transform, start here: https://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/20 ... -ffts.html
For me the drawing is a tool that communicates intent, not a legal document. I do respect color blindness in my color choices for lines/notes, and I pick colors that are readable on white paper if any one of the black, cyan, magenta, and yellow are busted.
If I ever needed something more rigorous, I'd use colors from Paul Tol's "bright" palette (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages ... references), list the colors with their RGB codes in the title block, and make some handwavy statement that the use of the document implies the ability to distinguish those colors, and otherwise to request a more accessible version.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Black model, red dimensions, blue notes covers most of our drawings.
More colours sometimes get added if multiple cables need to be shown where to be routed around the product.
Full model shaded views are a rarity.
Getting hung up on how it looks printed black and white seems to be a bit too pandering to anyone clinging to the past. They receive the document in colour to quote and base the purchase order on, if their processes get something wrong after that, that's on them.
More colours sometimes get added if multiple cables need to be shown where to be routed around the product.
Full model shaded views are a rarity.
Getting hung up on how it looks printed black and white seems to be a bit too pandering to anyone clinging to the past. They receive the document in colour to quote and base the purchase order on, if their processes get something wrong after that, that's on them.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
This doesn't negate the use of color printing. This only shows the lack of sense of choosing correct color.Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 4:11 pm 2. Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Drafting standards evolve over time. We also are curmudgeonly sticks in the mud (or maybe that's just me) who dislike change.
In the ancient of days prints were INKED because pencil wasn't dark enough to be reliably copied many times using the technology of the day. It produced cleaner, crisper copies. So standard were developed to facilitate the inking process.
Then the copy technology improved and pencil drawings were accepted as good enough if they were on quality material like mylar or vellum. To help differentiate, varoius line thickness standards were adopted to assist readabilitly. This was partially a carry over from inking as well.
Then CAD came along, first in large companies and then with AutoDesk gving away copies to schools everywhere it became common place across the industry. (This is where I came in with the transition from AutoCAD R11 with a digitizer pad imitating a Unix based CAD system to R13 and a completely Windows based/toolbar interface. So, I learned hand drafting with manual drafting tables AND new-fangled CAD. Quick history note, my grandfather helped establish the first EVER CAD system by Computervision at Babcock & Wilcox. They chose a computer guy and a shop guy to help with implementation. He was the shop guy. Cool stuff).
I'm not sure about other CAD systems at the time, but none that I used could emulate line weights so drafting standards for layers and colors were developed. But, then printing technology didn't lend itself to easy or cheap color reproduction. Enter pen plotters. They brought along other standards designed to improve plotting efficiency and eliminate retrace. Color prints were everywhere.
Printing tech improved, plotters began to wane and CAD standards evolved to B&W to match the printing tech. Often it was considered a "waste" of toner to print with lineweights so standards (perhaps not officially) moved away from lineweights. This era sees a lot of unnecessary part detail and the creep away from traditional standards on view spacing, dimensions spacing, etc. It was not a happy time for crotechety old men like me.
3D Parametric Modelling became the norm, .pdfs became ubiquitoius and CAD standards continue to adapt to what is considered best practice.
The moral of my long-winded post? The goal is always two-fold. First, convey design information in an accurate and understandable way. Second, convey that information in a way that is reproducible and distributable to a wide variety of contracts, vendors, suppliers, customers, fabricators, etc with a minimal amount of rework.
So, when deciding on whether using colors in prints is right for your business, you should use these two principles regarding your internal processes and then again regarding your external processes. For us, we know that our end users will not be using large format printers and will not likely be using color and will also be receiving said documents in pdf format. So our drawings reflect those realities (max drawing size is 11" x 17" and we format in B&W with occasional color where it seems appropriate, usually on a shaded 3D view).
I think the globalisation of this industry makes hard and fast standards on an international scale difficult to justify (unless you are in a specific field that has expectations) as what makes sense in one geographic area may not make sense in another. Anyway, enough of my incoherent ramblings...
In the ancient of days prints were INKED because pencil wasn't dark enough to be reliably copied many times using the technology of the day. It produced cleaner, crisper copies. So standard were developed to facilitate the inking process.
Then the copy technology improved and pencil drawings were accepted as good enough if they were on quality material like mylar or vellum. To help differentiate, varoius line thickness standards were adopted to assist readabilitly. This was partially a carry over from inking as well.
Then CAD came along, first in large companies and then with AutoDesk gving away copies to schools everywhere it became common place across the industry. (This is where I came in with the transition from AutoCAD R11 with a digitizer pad imitating a Unix based CAD system to R13 and a completely Windows based/toolbar interface. So, I learned hand drafting with manual drafting tables AND new-fangled CAD. Quick history note, my grandfather helped establish the first EVER CAD system by Computervision at Babcock & Wilcox. They chose a computer guy and a shop guy to help with implementation. He was the shop guy. Cool stuff).
I'm not sure about other CAD systems at the time, but none that I used could emulate line weights so drafting standards for layers and colors were developed. But, then printing technology didn't lend itself to easy or cheap color reproduction. Enter pen plotters. They brought along other standards designed to improve plotting efficiency and eliminate retrace. Color prints were everywhere.
Printing tech improved, plotters began to wane and CAD standards evolved to B&W to match the printing tech. Often it was considered a "waste" of toner to print with lineweights so standards (perhaps not officially) moved away from lineweights. This era sees a lot of unnecessary part detail and the creep away from traditional standards on view spacing, dimensions spacing, etc. It was not a happy time for crotechety old men like me.
3D Parametric Modelling became the norm, .pdfs became ubiquitoius and CAD standards continue to adapt to what is considered best practice.
The moral of my long-winded post? The goal is always two-fold. First, convey design information in an accurate and understandable way. Second, convey that information in a way that is reproducible and distributable to a wide variety of contracts, vendors, suppliers, customers, fabricators, etc with a minimal amount of rework.
So, when deciding on whether using colors in prints is right for your business, you should use these two principles regarding your internal processes and then again regarding your external processes. For us, we know that our end users will not be using large format printers and will not likely be using color and will also be receiving said documents in pdf format. So our drawings reflect those realities (max drawing size is 11" x 17" and we format in B&W with occasional color where it seems appropriate, usually on a shaded 3D view).
I think the globalisation of this industry makes hard and fast standards on an international scale difficult to justify (unless you are in a specific field that has expectations) as what makes sense in one geographic area may not make sense in another. Anyway, enough of my incoherent ramblings...
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- zxys001
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
This thread reminded me of this...
https://www.solidsmack.com/cad/multi-co ... olidworks/
https://www.solidsmack.com/cad/multi-co ... olidworks/
"Democracies aren't overthrown; they're given away." -George Lucas
“We only protect what we love, we only love what we understand, and we only understand what we are taught.” - Jacques Cousteau
“We only protect what we love, we only love what we understand, and we only understand what we are taught.” - Jacques Cousteau
- Frederick_Law
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Cool. Is there one for drawing? Color each character different color?zxys001 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 27, 2022 12:32 pm This thread reminded me of this...
https://www.solidsmack.com/cad/multi-co ... olidworks/
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I have found that colored shaded views works better than hatching for for many things. The one we use it for the most is what area of a plastic part are textured.
I have also used color shaded views on complex machined manifolds. The outside surfaces were transparent and each hole was a different color. The machinist loved this because it was easy to see which holes connected together. Service and manufacturing could also understand the plumbing better.
I have also used color shaded views on complex machined manifolds. The outside surfaces were transparent and each hole was a different color. The machinist loved this because it was easy to see which holes connected together. Service and manufacturing could also understand the plumbing better.
_________________________________________________________________________
"To succeed, planning alone is insufficient. One must improvise as well."
Salvor Hardin in Isaac Asimov's Novel, "Foundation"
"To succeed, planning alone is insufficient. One must improvise as well."
Salvor Hardin in Isaac Asimov's Novel, "Foundation"
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I use that alot for imported assemblies.zxys001 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 27, 2022 12:32 pm This thread reminded me of this...
https://www.solidsmack.com/cad/multi-co ... olidworks/
_________________________________________________________________________
"To succeed, planning alone is insufficient. One must improvise as well."
Salvor Hardin in Isaac Asimov's Novel, "Foundation"
"To succeed, planning alone is insufficient. One must improvise as well."
Salvor Hardin in Isaac Asimov's Novel, "Foundation"
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
@Frederick_Law , @HDS
You can use Assembly Visualization for that and save it as a display state:
@Alin had a presentation about it.
Edit: Ah, sorry @Frederick_Law , I saw that you were asking for the drawing.
You can use Assembly Visualization for that and save it as a display state:
@Alin had a presentation about it.
Edit: Ah, sorry @Frederick_Law , I saw that you were asking for the drawing.
- AlexLachance
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
We use black and white for production drawings. The drawings which we have colors on are pneumatic, hydraulic, electric, and other things such as esthetics drawings(drawings where we position stickers and other things of that nature)jcapriotti wrote: ↑Fri Jul 22, 2022 1:19 pm We use color on our drawings and the also create the associated PDFs in color. Dimensions, hidden lines, notes are all a different color while the part itself is black. We also show shaded views in some cases if it helps.
Our global parent company is trying to standardize all divisions worldwide and the other countries insist that everything should be black and white line drawings. I can't find anything in ASME standards regarding color, not sure about ISO standards. Since CAD systems now allow shaded views, it seems like printing in color is acceptable and enhances readability IMO. We do choose darker colors that print well on white paper and also print well on black and white printers.
What does your company do?
Example:
image.png
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I'm arriving late to the party, but here are my two cents.
ISO, DIN and BSI make mandatory the use of black lines on white paper or white lines on blue/black paper.
No shaded views at all. this is to improve reproduction, readability and microfilming ( yes, microfilming is still a thing). From the practical point of view somebody somewhere will scan a print and reprint it in the wrong paper size and if your print/drawing has shaded views, you lost all detail.
Also, the dimensions shall also be in black, not in colour.
ISO and BSI accept the use of coloured lines only if you explain their meaning in a key. However, if you go up the ISO system for technical documentation matrix, Black lines on white paper take precedence.
ISO, DIN and BSI make mandatory the use of black lines on white paper or white lines on blue/black paper.
No shaded views at all. this is to improve reproduction, readability and microfilming ( yes, microfilming is still a thing). From the practical point of view somebody somewhere will scan a print and reprint it in the wrong paper size and if your print/drawing has shaded views, you lost all detail.
Also, the dimensions shall also be in black, not in colour.
ISO and BSI accept the use of coloured lines only if you explain their meaning in a key. However, if you go up the ISO system for technical documentation matrix, Black lines on white paper take precedence.
- jcapriotti
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
@Josuevivash Can you point me to the specific ISO standards that state this? I've never been able to find anything definitive.
Jason
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Unfortunately the standards can't keep up with the speed of change. Josuevivash mentions in standards Microfilm but Microfilm is dead, no company in their right mind would pursue a policy of microfilming data anymore and CAD data would be utter madness. We are in world where many drawings will never get printed anymore, the drawings in reality will only ever get viewed on a computer screen.
- jcapriotti
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
@RichGergely I would agree, in general, standards always fail to keep up. For us, we print all drawings to PDF, they are rarely printed to paper. And in those cases, we picked colors that print to black and white printer fine and remain legible. @AlexLachance pics above are great examples of color drawings that are more readable than just black and white line drawings.
Look at other drafting techniques where things are overridden and noted as something like "Lines removed for clarity". It's all about making clear and understandable drawings to manufacture by. Not using color and shaded views seems like drafting with one hand tied behind your back.
Look at other drafting techniques where things are overridden and noted as something like "Lines removed for clarity". It's all about making clear and understandable drawings to manufacture by. Not using color and shaded views seems like drafting with one hand tied behind your back.
Jason
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I suspect some here could get some insight into standards across the industries by visiting this site and retrieving the free PDF they offer.
Much is covered with regards to standardization and could be used as a baseline to create a small companies standards as well.
Food for thought anyway.
https://wbdg.org/ffc/army-coe/technical ... itl-tr19-7
Much is covered with regards to standardization and could be used as a baseline to create a small companies standards as well.
Food for thought anyway.
https://wbdg.org/ffc/army-coe/technical ... itl-tr19-7
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Oooooh, Barricade design.
You know what I'm building around the house this winter.
You know what I'm building around the house this winter.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
You might be interested to know that the A/E/C CAD Standard (developed for US DoD use -- I don't know how widely adopted it is) that @DeanD linked to was amended to specify a "dirty yellow" for exactly that reason, rather than the bright RGB = (255, 255, 0) that looks more visible on screen.Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 4:11 pm Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
BTW, I wonder,.. in a Drawing view, does anyone know a way to save the "Draft Analysis" colors? As a Display State maybe or a Config?
"Democracies aren't overthrown; they're given away." -George Lucas
“We only protect what we love, we only love what we understand, and we only understand what we are taught.” - Jacques Cousteau
“We only protect what we love, we only love what we understand, and we only understand what we are taught.” - Jacques Cousteau
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I think making rainbow prints is a bad idea, but adding a little color here and there shouldn't be an issue, if the colors are picked correctly. Back in the mid 90's when I first started using autocad and didn't know any better all of my dimensions were red. That was about as crazy as I got. (Maybe crosshatches were blue?)Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 4:11 pm There are many reasons not to use color in legal engineering documentation. Let's just cover a few quickly.
1. Color blindness- Statistics show 1-12 male humans have a form of color blindness. With a heavy male dominated industry color blindness is an even higher ratio.- Someone can miss content on drawings.
It's 2023. We've had inkjet printers sitting on our desk for 20 years. Is this really a problem? (Seriously asking. I only know my tiny corner of the world.)Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 4:11 pm 2. Color does not reproduce well and will lead to loss of information on a legal document. Photo copying or printing to b/w or grayscale will cause loss of emphasis and this can lead to dimensions or other information being lost. Think of printing yellow text or lines to a grayscale print..then copy that print.
3. Cost of color printing is still quite high compared to B/W and grayscale.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Are you talking about actual model view of draft analysis? If you are there will be no way to do it, you can't even save as JPG in the 3D model environment. Totally useless. Probably a SPR hanging around for it but you would have to first be able to save a jpg of the colours in the 3D environment if there was any chance to be able to do it in a drawing.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
RichGergely wrote: ↑Mon Dec 11, 2023 11:56 pm Are you talking about actual model view of draft analysis? If you are there will be no way to do it, you can't even save as JPG in the 3D model environment. Totally useless. Probably a SPR hanging around for it but you would have to first be able to save a jpg of the colours in the 3D environment if there was any chance to be able to do it in a drawing.
Hello Rich,
Yep. currently and in the past, I just copy/paste the draft analysis into the drawings.. but it would be kewl if we could have them linked?
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
More ink is used cleaning nozzle and calibrate.
Every time before we print color on the large HP. We need to print a few feet to clean the print heads.
Probably 15 to 30 minutes.
Laser is the way to go.
The problems with color.
Anyone here know and did color calibration on monitor and printer?
The only color that don't need calibration to work is black and white.
And there is more than 50 shades of grey. We all got different grey.
And Pantone start charging everyone to use their standard means the only industrial color standard is gone.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Here is a good example of how not to add color. You've got the whole spectrum available to you, and you chose 2 colors that are difficult for me to tell the difference. (On my TV the colors were all but indistinguishable. It is better on my PC.)
My guess is those colors are green and yellow, but that definitely falls into the range affected by my color blindness.
My guess is those colors are green and yellow, but that definitely falls into the range affected by my color blindness.
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I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
It doesn't help that they're on a dark background.SPerman wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 10:49 am Here is a good example of how not to add color. You've got the whole spectrum available to you, and you chose 2 colors that are difficult for me to tell the difference. (On my TV the colors were all but indistinguishable. It is better on my PC.)
image.png
My guess is those colors are green and yellow, but that definitely falls into the range affected by my color blindness.
"On the days when I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days."
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
The packaging industry uses "color blocks", aka "process control patches", as part of the printing process.
I suppose if one wanted to use a color on a print, but was a bit hesitant about everything printing the same grey tone, or looking too faint, they could do something similar in or near the title block that included all used colors. Thus anyone with a known accessibility issue could understand at a glance what they might find difficulty with.
I suppose if one wanted to use a color on a print, but was a bit hesitant about everything printing the same grey tone, or looking too faint, they could do something similar in or near the title block that included all used colors. Thus anyone with a known accessibility issue could understand at a glance what they might find difficulty with.
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
During covid, one of the news outlets loved to make maps that were all the same color, but different shades. Now there's a state, in the middle of the country, and your trying to decide of that is shade #3 or shade #4, and the legend is too far away to be of any value.
This isn't the worst example, but you get the idea.
Even if you aren't colorblind, that seems like a bad idea.
This isn't the worst example, but you get the idea.
Even if you aren't colorblind, that seems like a bad idea.
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I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
I'm sure someone thought it was prettier this way, and legibility wasn't considered.SPerman wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 1:34 pm During covid, one of the news outlets loved to make maps that were all the same color, but different shades. Now there's a state, in the middle of the country, and your trying to decide of that is shade #3 or shade #4, and the legend is too far away to be of any value.
This isn't the worst example, but you get the idea.
image.png
Even if you aren't colorblind, that seems like a bad idea.
"On the days when I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days."
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
- Frederick_Law
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
It is a Heat Map.SPerman wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 1:34 pm During covid, one of the news outlets loved to make maps that were all the same color, but different shades. Now there's a state, in the middle of the country, and your trying to decide of that is shade #3 or shade #4, and the legend is too far away to be of any value.
This isn't the worst example, but you get the idea.
image.png
Even if you aren't colorblind, that seems like a bad idea.
Different colour won't work.
Is this yellow darker then that blue?
Colour blind will have no problem. It still show dark and light area.
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Re: Thoughts on color prints.
Really?ryan-feeley wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 12:48 pm The packaging industry uses "color blocks", aka "process control patches", as part of the printing process.
I suppose if one wanted to use a color on a print, but was a bit hesitant about everything printing the same grey tone, or looking too faint, they could do something similar in or near the title block that included all used colors. Thus anyone with a known accessibility issue could understand at a glance what they might find difficulty with.
Color Block on Lindt Chocolate Package.jpg
Color blind can see the blocks and know what color it is?
Is the gray box on the left blue? The one on the right red?
Re: Thoughts on color prints.
As a young child, I knew my Grandfather was colorblind. Growing up in the era where we switched from black and white TV's to color TV's, I assumed being color blind meant you only saw in black and white. Then I found out I was color blind and realized that wasn't at all how it works, at least not for the vast majority. I can see color just fine, it's some of the nuances that get lost for me. My grandfather had it much worse, but he still saw color.
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I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams