(Approx. 427 words)
Scanning Published Photos
By Irving Elliott, Twin
Cities PC User Group, Minnesota
www.tcpc.com/
irving.elliott(at)att.net
Obtained from APCUG with the author's permission for publication by
APCUG member groups.
If you scan a photo from a
newspaper or magazine, then examine the results on your computer screen, you
may see a criss-cross pattern of fuzzy lines over the entire print. If you
print the scanned photo, you may also see such a pattern. This happens because
pictures in newspapers and magazines are printed in a “halftone” mode.
The halftone process was
invented when it was desired to print black-gray-white photographs using a
printing press that used only single-color black ink. In this process, the
photo is divided into a pattern of small squares, then each square is replaced
with a black “blob” of a size proportional to the average shade of black in the
square. For example: a white square remains white; a light gray square becomes
a small black blob; a dark gray square becomes a larger black blob; a black
square remains black. The gray shades were called “half-tones”, which explains
the name of the process. Originally, the conversion was done by
re-photographing the picture with a camera that contained a wire screen. then
developing the picture in a high-contrast mode. Nowadays, the process can be
accomplished on a computer.


If the density (squares per
inch) of the scanned picture is not an exact multiple of the pixel density of
the scanner, computer screen, or printer, an interference pattern occurs. They
may also appear if the original photo is slightly rotated after scanning.
Colored pictures from
publications may also give you interference patterns. For these, the halftone
process uses filters to split the image into more than one black-gray-white
photo, with each photo representing the intensities for each color. In each
resulting halftone, the blob pattern is slightly offset from that of the other
halftones. The picture is reproduced by printing the same paper once for each
halftone, in the corresponding color. The printing press does not print one color
on top of another because of the slight offset of the halftones.
You can get rid of the
interference pattern by processing the picture with any photo software package
that has a “blur” or “soften” selection. For example, in Paint Shop Pro, the
IMAGE/SOFTEN menu selection spreads the black blobs so that the fuzzy bars
magically disappear.
This article has been provided to APCUG by the author solely for publication by APCUG member groups. All other uses require the permission of the author (see e-mail address above).