Find which halftone was used

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Mesho
Mesho on 31 May 2023
Moved: Stephen23 on 1 Jun 2023
Dear all,
I have a colored halftone image. I want to know which halftone method was used to generate this image (or which method is the nearest to it).
Is there any way to know that?
Mustafa

Answers (1)

DGM
DGM on 31 May 2023
Edited: DGM on 31 May 2023
I imagine the answer is "maybe, but probably not".
The big problem I see is that it seems that when most people say "halftone", they don't mean halftone at all.
they mean dithering.
So without any information, I'm left unable to know which problem is being described.
If you have a halftone image, then is it digitally halftoned, or is it a photo or scan of a print?
If you have a dithered color image then you might be able to tell some things, but I doubt an exact answer is obtainable. For a black/white reduction of a grayscale image, you might be able to get away with more, but for color images, you're left trying to derive one or more coefficient matrices and determine the underlying quantization method and the color space in which quantization was performed -- all blindly without a reference. I don't think there's enough information to do that.
With that in mind, maybe it also matters what specific information is required. Is it actually necessary to find the size of the coefficient matrix and all of its values, or is it sufficient to just say "this image uses ordered dithering"? Also, is it necessary to do this programmatically for multiple images, or is it sufficient to show one image to someone and get an educated guess?
  1 Comment
Mesho
Mesho on 1 Jun 2023
Moved: Stephen23 on 1 Jun 2023
Thank you for the many useful information.
To make things clearer, I am showing here two microscopic images of an old printed material. I wanted to know which halftone method was used by the old printer or at least to make a good guess.
Note that both images are from the same old printed material but with different magnification at the microscope (first image is with higher magnification).

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