When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cold foil printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_foil_printing

    Cold foil printing, also known as cold foil stamping, is a modern method of printing metallic foil on a substrate in order to enhance the aesthetic of the final product. . Cold foil printing can be done two ways: the older dry lamination process common in the offset printing industry, or the newer, more versatile wet lamination process, which is dominant in the flexo label indus

  3. Cold stamping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_stamping

    Cold stamping, also known as press working, [1] is a manufacturing operation in which thermoplastics in sheet form are cold-formed using methods similar to those used in metalworking. [2] A precut thermoplastic sheet, possibly reinforced, is softened by heating to a temperature particular to the plastic in use.

  4. Category:Printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Printing

    P. Pad printing; Page numbering; Page orientation; Page printer; Pantone; Paper and ink testing; Paper density; Parzatumar; Peel (tool) Photochrom; Phototypesetting

  5. Thermal-transfer printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal-transfer_printing

    Thermal-transfer printing is done by melting wax within the print heads of a specialized printer. The thermal-transfer print process utilises three main components: a non-movable print head, a carbon ribbon (the ink) and a substrate to be printed, which would typically be paper, synthetics, card or textile materials.

  6. Print simulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Print_simulation

    Typical systems include monitoring and cost analysis that allows the training process to correlate with versus the waste, cost and time on a ‘real’ press. [4] The simulators can either be either connected to a press control console (like the 'cockpit' in a flight simulator) or run on standard micro computer hardware with single or multiple screens.

  7. Trap (printing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_(printing)

    The same approach applies if one of the colors is a spot color and the other a process color. Trapping becomes more difficult if both colors are process colors and each is to be printed as a combination of the basic printing colors cyan, magenta, yellow and black. In this case, the trapping decision depends on the amount of ‘common’ color.

  8. Coining (metalworking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coining_(metalworking)

    Coining is a cold working process similar in other respects to forging, which takes place at elevated temperature; it uses a great deal of force to elastically deform a workpiece, so that it conforms to a die. Coining can be done using a gear driven press, a mechanical press, or more commonly, a hydraulically actuated press.

  9. Ludlow Typograph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludlow_Typograph

    A Ludlow Typograph is a hot metal typesetting system used in letterpress printing. The device casts bars, or slugs of type, out of type metal primarily consisting of lead. These slugs are used for the actual printing, and then are melted down and recycled on the spot. It was used to print large-type material such as newspaper headlines or posters.