Holographic Effects Introduction
The printed performance primarily lies in color variations, while holographic effects mainly depend on the design of the viewing angles. HOLO SOLUTION has deconstructed commonly used holographic design effects and listed them out to make it easier for designers to understand and apply them in their work. Some of these holographic effects can be combined by dividing into blocks, while others can even be layered. You can first propose an initial concept, and then HOLO SOLUTION will discuss the details with you.
Different patterns can be seen from different viewing angles.
The illusion of the pattern sinking into or protruding from the paper.
Patterns do not light up from a single angle but have a sparkling effect with flowing light and shadows.
Individual patterns light up only from a single angle.
Mixed depth of field effects with varying depths.
The white patterns are visible from all angles, with high clarity.
The flowing effect created by complex patterns is extremely difficult to replicate unless the original design is obtained.
The light and shadow of lines or patterns will flow according to the design, and complex line designs can increase the difficulty of counterfeiting.
The changing effects between the flowing background and the main image.
A gradient effect similar to animation.
When the pattern lights up, it has light and shadow effects with varying depths, suitable for creating high-contrast photos or portraits.
At a specific angle, the pattern can appear in photo-like colors, ideal for creating high-color-contrast photos or portraits.
Combining multiple laser effects in a single label can achieve a high level of anti-counterfeiting and customization. This image uses an overlapping combination method.
Combining multiple laser effects in a single label can achieve a high level of anti-counterfeiting and customization. This image fills different areas with different laser effects.
At different angles, different patterns light up, but without a rainbow color, appearing as metallic luster.
No colors, resembling the shimmer of fine metallic particles.
A colorless mosaic flicker effect.
A brushed metal effect.
A rounded embossed effect.
A 3D effect similar to an inflated balloon.
The smallest font that can be produced under the resolution of this process is hard for counterfeiters to detect. The laser process has extremely high resolution and can create ultra-small fonts as small as 50um, including fine Chinese characters.
A 3D light and shadow effect simulating a convex lens.
Patterns that appear as simple blocks of color to the naked eye but can only be seen using a special decoder, making it difficult for counterfeiters to reverse-engineer the hidden content.