A downloadable CMYK print emulation

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MRMO-Halftone is a Blender shader-based halftone offset printing emulation process that aims to evoke the "feel" of color halftone prints.

It converts the input texture from RGB to an approximated CMYK color model and overlays the four halftone "screens", resulting in an emulated halftone offset print.

It works in Eevee and Cycles render engines, and accepts image/video, as well as procedural texture input.

Note: as MRMO-Halftone is Blender material shader-based, this process works completely within Blender and can't be used outside of it (e.g. as a shader in various game engines).
It is not an add-on, does not require installation, and does not need any other add-ons to function, and it does not provide any new functionality to Blender. It is a process composed of material shader nodes, combined with an auto-resizing canvas-and-camera scene, and distributed as a .blend file.

The shader is contained within a single node group with exposed property sliders, and can easily be further reconfigured and customized.


Various properties are exposed in the main shader node, allowing for easy configuration of the basic parameters, such as customizing the halftone pattern dot randomness and rotation, simulating offset mismatch errors, customizing the CMYK "ink" colors etc.


The MRMO-Halftone "Basic" version includes the shader in a .blend scene, with basic configuration options.

The optional MRMO-Halftone "Deluxe" version includes the shader in a .blend scene, with several more advanced customization options, such as per-channel CMYK color multipliers and a handy pre-made, customizable procedural paper texture.


It's made to be as easy to use as possible, even for people new to Blender, the .blend scene includes a canvas and camera setup that automatically scales to the desired resolution; the only thing necessary to make it work is to plug in an image, set the rendering resolution and render the result!


Will this work on my PC?

-If Blender (at least version 3.1) works on your PC, then MRMO-Halftone should work too. It is relatively taxing on the hardware, so having a dedicated video card definitely helps run it faster! 

MRMO-Halftone was tested on Blender versions up to 3.1.2. It is recommended you update your Blender version to at least 3.1.2 to ensure the process is working as intended.


*Update V1.1:
"Low quality" update for MRMO-Halftone "Deluxe"!


The "Deluxe" version now features additional parameters to tune, including:
-Sun exposure and paper structure-based ink fading
-Ink color inconsistency
-"Specks" without ink

*Update V1.1s: "Express" update for MRMO-Halftone "Deluxe"!

The "Deluxe" version now comes with a simplified-controls "Express" variant as a separate .blend scene. This version features very few controls for more ease-of-use and getting rapid results using the new "quality" parameter.

*Update V1.21: "Physical" update for MRMO-Halftone "Deluxe"!


The "Deluxe" (and "Express") versions now feature normal and displacement texture based lighting setup, adjustable using the new "paper crumpling" property. (This makes the download size bigger due to the included textures!)

The update also features per-ink specks and dark specks, input texture scaling and several modified property values.

*Update V1.23: Better halftone pattern and more!


All versions of MRMO-Halftone now feature a better halftone pattern, and the old "Halftone Pattern Brightness" adjustment is now retooled to "Dot Gain". The dots in the halftone pattern can now overlap better, providing better and customizable ink coverage.

The halftone pattern rotation was reworked to feature better default angles.

A "Soften" adjustment was also added, to help break the hard halftone pattern edges, especially when processing pixel art.

The Input Image node group also features some adjustment parameters to help tune the input image before it's sent to the shader process.


*Update V1.23b: a couple of fixes and tweaks

I fixed the issue where the halftone pattern scale would not be calculated correctly for vertical-aspect images/canvas.
I also changed the default rendering resolution scale to 100% to prevent accidentally rendering extremely large resolution results.

*Update V1.24: "Enrich dark tones"!

The "Deluxe" (and "Express") versions now feature an option to "enrich" the dark tones of the image by adding cyan, magenta and yellow inks to the key ink. This can help produce deeper, richer dark tones.

The "Paper Structure Fade" slider should now provide a much more even fading across its value range.


Note: the "basic" version of the process is and always will be free. The "Deluxe" version is slightly more complex, with extra options, as a paid extra for people who want to support my work, or want to use the process commercially.


Licensing:

"Basic" version license: MRMO-Halftone "Basic" version can be used in non-commercial projects of any kind, excluding those relating to or containing non-fungible tokens ("NFT") or blockchain-related projects. You can modify it to suit your needs. You may not redistribute, or resell it, even if modified. Credit is not necessary, but very much appreciated.

"Deluxe" version license: MRMO-Halftone "Deluxe" version can be used in both non-commercial and commercial projects of any kind, excluding those relating to or containing non-fungible tokens ("NFT") or blockchain-related projects. You can modify it to suit your needs. You may not redistribute, or resell it, even if modified. Credit is not necessary, but very much appreciated.


I'd love to see what you create using MRMO-Halftone! I'm on Bluesky so feel free to show me your work there!

Updated 4 days ago
StatusReleased
CategoryOther
Rating
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars
(28 total ratings)
AuthorMrmo Tarius
TagsBlender, halftone, mrmo, mrmotarius, offset-print, Retro, Shaders, texture

Download

Download NowName your own price

Click download now to get access to the following files:

Current version - MRMO-Halftone Basic V1.23b.zip 148 kB
MRMO-Halftone Basic V1.23.zip 141 kB
MRMO-Halftone Basic V1.0.zip 123 kB
Current version - MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.24.zip 45 MB
if you pay $10 USD or more
MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.23b.zip 45 MB
if you pay $10 USD or more
MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.23.zip 45 MB
if you pay $10 USD or more
MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.21.zip 45 MB
if you pay $10 USD or more
MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.1s.zip 348 kB
if you pay $10 USD or more
MRMO-Halftone Deluxe V1.0.zip 142 kB
if you pay $10 USD or more

Development log

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Comments

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Looks fantastic!

One thing on my wish list is more paper distress options. Stuff like magazines and game manuals is rarely "crumbled up" completely, especially near the center of the page. Usually creases occur near the edges, when people leaf through them. Not sure how to choose how to spread it around, though. Stuff like dog ear marks would also be amazing.


While I'm dreaming I'd also love textures for the midfold:


Hey! I'll look into making more options, thanks for the references! :D

Can i purchase this, then reverse engineer it into a glsl shader for a video game?

Yes! And please show the results! :D

After playing with the full version for a bit, here are two (and a half) thoughts: 

1. This project is an incredible feat of ingenuity. Hats off! 

2. Would it be possible to expose the paper crumpling node as an input to accept other displacement / normal maps as textures? 

2a. Could this property then be used to drive "real" displacement of the plane using Cycles?

Thanks for any insight you may be able to share; my node knowledge is rather abysmal :)

(1 edit)

Thanks a bunch for your support! I'm glad you like this project :D 

Yeah, both exposing the crumple node (that is, making it easier to accept custom textures) and using displacement to modify the geometry in Cycles would be possible! Currently, you can get to the textures by digging into the main node group :)


Of course! I stumbled on your work after googling around to see who makes the best print emulator these days (I'm a digital graphic artist with a penchant for physicality), and I was shocked to find such a refined and robust tool.

That's fantastic; thank you for confirming. If it wouldn't be too much trouble, could you point me in the direction of how to modify the shader in those two ways?

If not, perhaps consider them as feature requests for a future update? ;)

Help! Im using Blender 3.6.1 and it's not working!

Oh! Could you describe what happens? I'm currently traveling and don't have access to a pc, but I'll try and troubleshoot this if possible :) 

If it's not too much of a bother, could you try it on an earlier build of blender (3.5 for example)?

So I tried it with 3.1.10 but the image showed as blank! (The preview wasn't showing at all)

Hey! Have you checked the "basic usage tutorial"? Does Blender generally work okay on your machine?

Oops never read the tutorial lol it works now thank you so much!

Great! I'm glad it works, hope you'll have fun with it! :D

I also tried it with 3.1.2 but that didn't work ether!

Thinking it might be my computer...

Hi, first, thanks for your hard work to bring this amazing tool.

Is there a way to have a png image with transparent background?

(1 edit) (+1)

Hey! To clarify, you would like a transparent png as the result of the process? It should be possible with modification, but the entire process relies on the underlying "paper" to be there to mix the "inks" on, so the result would probably not be what you expected :)

Do check the comments section, I've posted a possible method to get this done :)

(+5)

A youtube video would be so great to watch for educational purposes. This has been the most detailed and user-friendly halftone node I've seen for blender, and I love that it works with Cycles. Thank you so much!

(+1)

This is amazing! I've been playing with it a lot and I can't get enough. One thing I don't seem to be able to do: Is there a way to set the paper/background alpha transparency in any way? After getting into the 4th or 5th node layer I thought it might be easier to just ask.

(+1)

Hey! The way the process works is by calculating separate C, M, Y and K values using the input image, and mixing an appropriate amount of "inks" on top of a "paper" backdrop, very similar to how actual printing works. You could get the "inks" value separately, but as there's no "white", any bright areas would result in transparency (the process basically overlays this result on top of a "paper" texture).


You could get around this by mixing the entire shader with a transparent shader using the input image's alpha as factor, like so:

The alpha obtained this way is not perfect, though.
Another, more complicated way would be to introduce a "fifth ink", based on the alpha instead of colors, which would make the transparency "halftoned" too; this would require modifying the halftone subprocess group to have an additional "alpha" output, and using that as the mix shader factor instead. This would also definitely fall outside of the scope I designed the process for :)

(+1)

Thanks so much for the answer. Indeed the transparency looks a bit weird with this method, but your explanation was really helpful and the nodes are starting to make more sense as I delve deeper. Just editing the interpolation type of the texture changes the end result completely.

I'll experiment with the setup to see if I can find ways to accomplish transparency and post it here if anyone needs it. Thanks for making this tool, it's a joy.

Any introduction help of how can I integrate this in a Unity project?

(+1)

Depends on how you want to do it; the shader process is completely contained within Blender and does not work outside of it, so you wouldn't be able to use it realtime in Unity. You can render assets as textures in Blender, save them as images and use the result in Unity.

Thanks for the suggestions :)

(+1)

Awesome tool! When trying the Paper Crumpling my version doesn't look like yours, though, more like dark cloudy noise. Is there something I'm missing? Thanks!

i have that too. i couldn't figure out why his examples of the paper crumpling looked cleaner

Hey! This requires me to do some troubleshooting, could you please share your basic hardware specs? Also, what OS and Blender version you're using?

At a first glance, this looks like a Blender issue of some sort, I've tested the process on the lowest-end hardware I could find that still can run Blender 3.x (an i5 laptop from 2015 with integrated graphics, running Windows 10), and after chugging along compiling shaders for almost a minute, it produced the correct result :/

Also, if you enter the shader node, and connect the "Light Normal" to the Group Output, what does the result look like?


Also, does changing the values in the "Lighting Setup" node do anything? I've managed to reproduce your result by setting all three light intensities to 0, which leads me to believe there's something wrong with how Blender does calculations there.

Hello! I'm using windows 10, Blender 3.0.0
Plugging the light normal in directly just gives me a black square.
Changing values in the lighting setup node doesn't do anything.


Actually, I do see a paper displacement and paper normal in the render, but I guess the normal isn't in the final result? Also not sure why it doesn't show up in the editor either.

(+1)

Thank you for helping me troubleshoot this; I've downloaded Blender v.3.0.0 and it is indeed a Blender version related issue.

In the "Normal Paper Texture" node group, these nodes are not connected properly if opened with older Blender versions, due to Map Range node being updated to support Vector inputs.


If you're unable to use a newer Blender version with MRMO-Halftone, you can bridge the missing connection like so:


This should allow you to use the "Paper Crumpling" feature, as it should now generate a valid output.

first of all, this is awesome. it looks really good.

second point is if it would be possible to auto detect the aspect ration of the input image because it's default state works well on landscape images, but throw something in with more vertical space and you have to go in and adjust your sizes so you don't end up with a distorted mess.

Hey! I've identified the problem, and will try to implement a solution as soon as I can!
The halftone pattern scale is not calculated correctly for vertical-oriented image textures, and I think I know how to fix it :)

(+1)

cool. thanks for the update

this is irrelevant but man it would be cool if you had a glitch art blender shader.

(+2)

This is truly amazing. The results are stunning

(+1)

Thank you, I'm glad you like it!

When I press f12 to render, the render is tiny and pixelated, what is wrong?

Be sure to set the resolution along with scaling here!
(For example, 320x200 resolution with 400% scaling will produce a 1280x800 render!)


(1 edit)

My percentage can't go higher than 100%.

(+1)

You can click on the percentage value and type in your own :)

(+1)

Oh there we go

Yay!

(+2)

Can we have instructions, I am having trouble bringing images in.

When I open the file is just grey.

(1 edit) (+4)

Yes, I'm in the process of making instructions! For now, here's this simplified version :)

To preview the result, switch to "rendered" view:

Select the InputImage node and hit "Tab" to enter (but I see you already did this :)

Clear the included default texture:

Load your own texture:


Set the rendering resolution and scaling here:


Hit "F12" to render, Alt-S to save the resulting render (or "image->save as"). 

"Esc" should return you from the rendered result to the original preview viewport.

thanks!

(+1)

It is not easy for those not familiar with Blender nodes. Struggled myself before figuring it out...

Select the "Input Image" node, hit Tab to edit the group. 

Then you can use the "Image Texture" node in the middle to select your source image.

(+1)

With the Basic license can I use this for advertising, or should I purchase the Deluxe version? (Just genuinely not sure where advertising falls in the commercial/non-commercial space)

(+1)

Without knowing the context, I couldn't really say. Depends on what the advertising is for :)

(+4)

1. Are you getting paid to make the advertisement?
2. Are you making it for a commercial entity (i.e. a business)?
3. Is it advertising something that is intended to make money?

If you answered yes to any of those questions, I'm pretty sure the answer would be that it is commercial use, legally speaking. Of course, the creator can always choose to allow you to use it even if your use is commercial in nature

(+7)

Thank you for the info! I ended up buying it anyway, partially just to be safe, partially because I do think it counts as commercial, and partially just to support the dev.

(+3)

i like the look very halftone indeed. keep making amazing tools like this

I'll try my best :D

(+2)

Another amazing tool! Keep up the great work, this is awesome!

Thanks! Glad you like it :D