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The
printing industry is like a big machine with many
gears. For the machine to operate smoothly, all
the gears must operate together in harmony. Should
one of the gears become out of sync with the others,
the machinery stops working!! For example, if
the Creative artist is late with the art work,
the job is delayed. If the Paper mill is late
on an order or ships defective paper, the job
is delayed, etc. etc. When delays are experienced
it costs the customer time, money and aggravation!
Well
in most cases someone needs to get some kind of
information out. It can be as small as someone
in your neighborhood having a garage sale and
needing to convey that fact or as large as a car
company needing to promote a new automobile. The
principals are still the same for large or small.
To
successfully complete a print job, large or small,
several steps are needed to organize, plan, design
and print. No matter how large or small the customer
may be, the process is similar. The person holding
a garage sale who needs a two color fl yer printed
will still have to organize their thoughts, pick
a printer (Kinko's for example), pick the type
of paper they want, etc. The large corporate buyer
does the same only on a more grand scale. They
may work through an Advertising agency and pick
a national printer like Donnelley but the process
is still much the same.
The
following depicts the publication/printing process:
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The
customer must gather all the requirments for
the publication to be printed. Working with
an Ad Agency, budgets, schedules and output
quality are determined. Art sketchs and layouts
are completed.
-
Once
the Ad agency knows what the end product will
be and how it will printed, they can determine
what pre-press tasks are needed (trap-ping,
color, etc.). A printer is usually sought
either a bid basis or by contract.
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Now
that a printer has been selected in step two,
we need to discuss the needs and special requirements
for the job being printed. The Ad agency may,
at this point, be working with a Merchant
Specifier to determine the proper paper to
print the job onto.
-
Images
and photographs will be scanned, text written
and approved and page layout is then completed.
-
After
page layout is completed, proofs are printed
for the customer to view and either make changes
or to accept and go to press. If changes are
needed, additional proofs will be generated
for approval.
-
Once
the customer has approved the proofs? the
job is ready to be printed. Film or plate
separations are made and the job is on its
way to press! Assuming paper that was selected
has arrived at the printer in good shape,
on time and the job has been scheduled we
are on our way to a successful print job!
Sooo,
How does a printing job all come together you
ask??
The
Printing House
A Printing
Company is made up of several key areas all which
serve to accomplish many tasks. To print a job,
a basic cycle is followed, which has not changed
that much since the time of Ben Franklin! The
basic cycle is:
- Identifying
a need
- Creating
an image design
- Reproducing
the image design
- Distributing
the printed mesage
The
cycle begins with an identified need. The need
might be as simple as the reproduction of a form
or ads sophisticated as a poster intended to change
human attitudes. Whatever the need, a graphic
design evolves. Special design agencies are often
set up whose sole purpose is to sell ideas and
work closely with the printer as the design is
turned into print for the customer.
The
function of Print Management is to be responsible
for reproducing the image design. The most efficient
printing process must be identified. Such variables
as the type of material to be printed, length
of run, number and types of colors, time requirements,
desired quality, and customer's cost limitations
must all be considered. A typical printing house
would include:
- Sales
- to sell printing or gain customers
- CSR's
(Customer Service Representatives) - to assist
sales and customers
- Estimators
- To provide the quotations and pricing information
- Production
- To take the design and print it, finish it
and ship it!
- Shipping
- To ship the printed product
Once
the design has been approved, the design is turned
over to the printer who has been selected by the
customer. The image is designed to meet a need.
Sketches and final layouts are made, and design
variables such as type style, visual position,
type size, balance, and harmony are all considered.
This is the Image Design step. From this stage,
Image Generation takes place. Today the printer,
using high powered PC's (IBM or Clones) or Mac's
(MacIntosh), will take the design and layout it
out for image generation (film or plates). If
not using Computer to Plate (or film), the individual
pieces of film (image generation) will need to
be stripped or assembled into position to make
an printing plate. This is known as the Image
Assembly step. The assembled films are then photographically
transferred to an image carrier during the Image
Carrier Preparation step. The image carriers for
each printing process may operate differently,
but all must be prepared with the same general
photographic considerations.
The
image must be printed onto a receiver material
during the Image Transfer step. This is the actual
printing step. The image is transferred from the
plate (offset or otherwise) to the substrate.
The last step in the process is the Finishing
step. This step combines the printed material
into a final finished form that can be delivered
to the customer. This may include cutting, perforating,
scoring, folding, inserting, stapling, binding,
and/or packaging.
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