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Color image forming device and method
   
Document Number
US Patent 6972871
Issued Date
December 6, 2005
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Inventors
Tsuda; Yu (Nakai-machi,JP)
Ide; Osamu (Nakai-machi,JP)
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Abstract
A color image forming device and method prevent occurrence of pile height moires specific to electrophotographic images in low-frequency areas and conventional moires in a digital screen set of four colors. In the color image forming device, by at least one of a halftone generating part and scanning signal forming unit in an image processing unit, differences among screen angles of three dot patterns corresponding to cyan, magenta and black toner images are in the range about 25 to 40 degrees, preferably 30 degrees; the screen angle of a first dot pattern corresponding to a yellow toner image is made equal to that of a second dot pattern corresponding to the toner image of one of cyan, magenta and black; and the screen of the first dot pattern is brought about 150 to 210 degrees, preferably about 180 degrees out of phase with the screen of the second dot pattern.
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Number of Claims:
12
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Owner
Published
December 6, 2005
Application Number
09/963,542
Filed
September 27, 2001
US Classification
358/1.9   358/3.2 358/3.26 358/533 358/536
Int'l Classification
Examiner
Attorney/Law Firm
Priority Data
Sep 29, 2000 [JP] 2000-298466
USPTO Field of Search
358/1.9   358/3.2   358/3.26   358/533   358/534   358/535   358/536  
Related Patents
7221479 - Method for avoiding multiple color moires in color halftoning - Owned by Xerox Corporation (Stamford, CT)

A method for halftoning an image, including receiving image data including a plurality of color separations and comparing image data for first, second, third, and fourth separations to first, second, third, and fourth halftone screens. The screens are characterized by first, second, third, and fourth pairs of frequency vectors, respectively. The fourth pair of frequency vectors is identical to one of the first, second, and third pairs of frequency vectors. Further, the first, second, third, and fourth screens have an associated fill-in sequence, where the fill-in sequence of the fourth screen is such that overlap between the separation corresponding to the fourth screen and the separation corresponding to the one of the first, second, and third screens to which the fourth screen has an identical pair of frequency vectors does not occur until a combined dot area coverage of the separations is greater than 100%.

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Description
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