What is digital printing process?

08 Apr.,2024

 

What is Digital Printing Process?

The digital printing process involves printing on different media like paper, fabric, acrylic, plastic, etc., directly from a digital image. It is professionally done print work and small jobs from desktop publishing and other digital sources which are printed via inkjet printers of large format or high volume.

Digital printing is certainly more expensive per page than conventional methods; however, the cost of making printing plates is eliminated, bringing down the overall cost. Digital printing can also be done on demand and in a short time; images can be easily altered for each impression as well. With its huge savings in labor and rapidly improving capabilities, digital printing has slowly begun to match the ability of offset printing. It is now possible to print thousands of sheets at a low price with digital printing. Get some details on digital printing vs offset printing.

The most popular printers used digital printing processes are inkjet and laser printers that drop pigments or toners on numerous substrates like paper, glass, canvas, metal, fabric, marble, and plastic. Usually the ink or toner only forms a slim layer on the surface without permeating the substrate – which happens in traditional methods. A fuser fluid with heat process is used for toner and UV curing process is used for ink so that it adheres firmly to the substrate. Checkout some print finishing techniques.

Now that we have understood the digital printing process let us see the steps involved in printing it. Now obviously the first step is getting your design ready; some customers may outsource the designing job to the printing company, and some may want to create it themselves. If you would like to create the design yourself, here is what you need to do.

 

Generate an Idea

You need to be very clear about what you want to achieve with your design; who are you targeting? What is the purpose – brainstorm till you are absolutely sure of the ‘why’ in the first place.

 

Use Appropriate Content

Once you are clear with the main idea – begin the artwork. Your content can include logos, pictures, and text. If you want the branding message to be driven into the customers’ minds, be sure to use colors, visuals and text that represent your brand and company. Keep some basic content easily accessible, so that in future you can save time.

 

Keep it Professional

You’re putting forward your company’s image – so keep it professional, otherwise it can hurt your reputation. Outsource the designing to a professional if you cannot afford a full-time in-house designer. Even if you have to pay a hefty amount, the design is yours for good, and you can reuse the design whenever you want. Professional designs can help you build your reputation, and earns trust – whether it’s an ad, your logo, or even giveaways.

 

Proofread

This is an absolute must whenever you create content for any purpose. Go over your content with a fine-tooth comb, and ensure that there are no grammar errors, address, dates, spelling mistakes, and so on. Finalize the product only when you’re absolutely sure of its perfection.

 

Ready your Work for Printing

You need to save your design in the correct print-ready format. It should be saved in CMYK format and in 300dpi (dots per inch). This ensures preservation of the quality and keeps it ready for the digital printing process. If you don’t save it in 300 dpi, the pixels will get disintegrated because of the low-resolution image, and the final image may be impacted. Your final design should ideally have a bleed area in addition to a border.

You then take your design to the printing company, and step 3 is where you will be next.

If you’re not going to do the designing yourself, but would rather have the printing company help you with it, then you begin from Step 1 and continue. So let’s take a look at the steps now:

Step 1

Some digital printing companies have their own artists who create custom designs based on your requirements and instructions. They may have a detailed discussion or meeting to understand your requirements fully. Once the design is ready, the customer (you) will be emailed the mockup; any changes you recommend will be incorporated, and the final version will be sent to the customer again. Once you give the go-ahead, only then will we move to the next step.

Step 2

When the final design is approved, the artwork is saved in the appropriate format with the correct resolution as mentioned earlier, to make it easy for the printer to recognize and print the product without error.

Step 3

First, the print heads are cleaned with a special fluid so that they don’t become dry and suffer damage. This step is repeated after every 100 prints; sometimes the heads need to be cleaned even before 100 prints are completed, depending on the amount of color in the print.

Step 4

In this phase a series of checks are conducted. With every printing, some waste ink is produced by the printer, and it is collected in a drum. This drum needs to be monitored, and regularly emptied to ensure that no ink spills out. The printing machine has a container of cleaner; whenever the cleaner levels get low, it is replenished. This cleaner is critical to the printing process, and hence care has to be taken to make sure that the printer never runs out of this cleaner. Every time the printer stops and restarts, it uses a certain amount of cleaner – and insufficient cleaner could damage the heads. The ink temperature also needs to be checked; the printer needs to operate at a temperature between 20 and 25 degrees C. a temperature outside this range could cause damage to the printer heads.

Step 5

The stage is set for printing the customer’s artwork on the product they desire once all the checks have been conducted successfully.

Step 6

There are different sized pallets to hold the product. Depending on what is being printed on, the appropriate sized pallet is attached to the machine, and the product is laid out on it, ready for printing.

Step 7

The material or product to be printed is laid absolutely flat on the board without any creases. If there are any creases, the print will be distorted.

Step 8

The digital printer begins the actual printing by moving the print heads from side to side, on the material, spraying the design on to it.

Step 9

The material or product is removed from the pallet with great care once the printing is complete. It is then conveyed through a huge dryer at the appropriate temperature, to ensure that the print is baked onto the item, or adheres securely.

Step 10

The last step is the quality check. Once we are satisfied about the quality, the products are packaged and readied to be dispatched.

Digital printing is very popular in India, and in the textile sector, it is fast growing in popularity as digital prints offer greater clarity. In fact, industry experts predict a higher demand for digitally printed fabrics. Digital printing offers you more variety, and faster turnaround time, in addition to clarity and reduced overall expenditure. There are different types of digital printing equipments also.

If you’re looking for a reliable digital printing machine company in India, contact us at Curated Graphic Supplies . We have state of the art equipment, dedicated workforce, and one of the fastest turnaround times in the industry.

Method of printing

Not to be confused with 3D printing

Digital printing is a method of printing from a digital-based image directly to a variety of media.[1] It usually refers to professional printing where small-run jobs from desktop publishing and other digital sources are printed using large-format and/or high-volume laser or inkjet printers.

Digital printing has a higher cost per page than more traditional offset printing methods, but this price is usually offset by avoiding the cost of all the technical steps required to make printing plates. It also allows for on-demand printing, short turnaround time, and even a modification of the image (variable data) used for each impression.[2] The savings in labor and the ever-increasing capability of digital presses means that digital printing is reaching the point where it can match or supersede offset printing technology's ability to produce larger print runs of several thousand sheets at a low price.[3]

Process

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Large format digital prints

The greatest difference between digital printing and analog methods, such as lithography, flexography, gravure, and letterpress, is that in digital printing (introduced in the 1980s) there is no need to replace the printing plate, whereas in analog printing the plates are repeatedly replaced.[4] This results in quicker turnaround time and lower cost in digital printing, but typically a loss of detail in most commercial digital printing processes. The most popular methods include inkjet and laser printers, which deposit pigment and toner, respectively, onto substrates, such as paper, canvas, glass, metal, and marble.

In many of the processes, the ink or toner does not permeate the substrate, as does conventional ink, but forms a thin layer on the surface that may be additionally adhered to the substrate by a fuser fluid with thermal (toner) or ultraviolet curing (ink).

Digital printing methods of note

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Fine art inkjet printing

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Large format printing of black numbers on a brushed aluminum sheet by a Mimaki inkjet printer

Fine art digital inkjet printing is printing from a computer image file directly to an inkjet printer as a final output. It evolved from digital proofing technology from Kodak, 3M, and other major manufacturers, with artists and other printers trying to adapt these dedicated prepress proofing machines to fine-art printing. There was experimentation with many of these types of printers, the most notable being the IRIS printer, initially adapted to fine-art printing by programmer David Coons, and adopted for fine-art work by Graham Nash at his Nash Editions printing company in 1991.[5] Initially, these printers were limited to glossy papers, but the IRIS Graphics printer allowed the use of a variety of papers that included traditional and non-traditional media. The IRIS printer was the standard for fine art digital printmaking for many years, and is still in use today, but has been superseded by large-format printers from other manufacturers such as Epson and HP that use fade-resistant, archival inks (pigment-based, as well as newer solvent-based inks), and archival substrates specifically designed for fine-art printing.[citation needed]

Substrates in fine art inkjet printmaking include traditional fine-art papers such as Rives BFK, Arches watercolor paper, treated and untreated canvas, experimental substrates (such as metal and plastic), and fabric.

Digital Printing Press

For artists making reproductions of their original work, inkjet printing is more expensive on a per-print basis than the traditional four-color offset lithography, but with inkjet printing the artist does not have to pay for the expensive printing-plate setup or the marketing and storage needed for large four-color offset print runs. Inkjet reproductions can be printed and sold individually in accordance with demand. Inkjet printing has the added advantage of allowing artists to take total control of the production of their images, including the final color correction and the substrates being used, with some artists owning and operating their own printers.

Digital inkjet printing also allows for the output of digital art of all types as finished pieces or as an element in a further art piece. Experimental artists often add texture or other media to the surface of a final print, or use it as part of a mixed-media work. Many terms for the process have been used over the years, including "digigraph" and "giclée". Thousands of print shops and digital printmakers now offer services to painters, photographers, and digital artists around the world.

Notable digital laser exposure

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Digital images are exposed onto true, light sensitive photographic paper with lasers and processed in photographic developers and fixers. These prints are true photographs and have continuous tone in the image detail. The archival quality of the print is as high as the manufacturer's rating for any given photo paper used. In large format prints, the greatest advantage is that, since no lens is used, there is no vignetting or detail distortion in the corners of the image.

Digital printing technology has grown significantly over the past few years with substantial developments in quality and sheet sizes.

Digital cylinder printing

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Digital cylinder printing is when a machine directly lays ink onto a curved surface that usually is the wall of an object that has a circular cross section, and a constant, tapered, or variable diameter. Digital cylinder printing is a method of reproducing black-and-white or full-color images and text onto cylindrical objects, typically promotional products, through use of digital imaging systems.

The digital process is by definition faster than conventional screen printing, because it requires fewer production steps and less set-up time for multiple colors and more complex jobs. This in turn enables reduced run lengths.

The ability of digital cylinder printing machines to print full color in one pass, including primers, varnishes and specialty inks, enables multiple design techniques, which include:

  • Mirror prints: viewable on the inside and outside of glass or plastic
  • Tone on tone: solid matte-finished substrate enhanced with one ink or clear coat
  • Stained glass: color opaque enough to see through
  • Contouring
  • Etched

Full-wrap cylindrical printing also benefits from seamless borders with no visual overlap. For ease of print file preparation, original design artwork should be able to be imaged on cylinders and tapered items without the need for manipulation or distortion; i.e., flat images will print to scale on a curved surface, with software automatically making the adjustment. The more advanced systems available on the market can handle these requirements.

The digital cylindrical printing process involves inserting a cylinder-shaped item, or part, into a fixture, which securely holds it in place. The part then travels under a print head mechanism in which tiny droplets of CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) inks are released in a specific pattern to form an image. Typically, one part is printed at a time and can require from 8 to 45 seconds to complete, depending on artwork complexity and quality. It is then finished with a UV coating to add a glossy finish and protect it from abrasion.

There are three different imaging techniques used by digital cylinder printing machines: multi-pass, single pass, and helical printing.

Multi-Pass: Multi-pass printing is when the print heads or printed object move axially in steps down the part, like a flatbed printer. The move time is inefficient and can lead to stitching artifacts between moves.

Single Pass: Single pass involves using an array of print heads to print the full image length with a single revolution of the printed object. Different colors are usually printed at different stations, leading to higher cost, increased complexity, and sensitivity to print nozzle drop-outs.  

Helical Printing: Helical printing is a hybrid method between the single-pass and multi-pass approaches. Image data is mapped to allow continuous imaging in a helical pattern with a limited number of print heads. Users can optimize the print resolution, speed, and curing controls to optimize image quality or choose higher speed if quality isn't critical. Tapers can be imaged at high speed and curved vessels can be managed through the range of controls offered.

Items that can be printed using digital cylindrical processes include cups, tumblers, thermos bottles, bottles, makeup containers, machine parts, carrier tubes, pens, tubes, jars and others.

Applications

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Digital printing has many advantages over traditional methods. Some applications of note include:

  • Desktop publishing – inexpensive home and office printing is only possible because of digital processes that bypass the need for printing plates
  • Commercial – Business Stationery - Including business cards, letterheads
  • Variable data printing – uses database-driven print files for the mass personalization of printed materials
  • Fine art – archival digital printing methods include real photo paper exposure prints and giclée prints on watercolor paper using pigment based inks.
  • Print on Demand – digital printing is used for personalized printing for example, children's books customized with a child's name, photo books (such as wedding photo books), or any other books.
  • Advertising – often used for outdoor vinyl banners and event signage, in trade shows, in the retail sector at point of sale or point of purchase, and in personalized direct mail campaigns.
  • Photos – digital printing has revolutionized photo printing in terms of the ability to retouch and color correct a photograph before printing.
  • Architectural Design – new media that conforms to a variety of surfaces has enabled interior and exterior spaces to be transformed using digitally printed wall murals and floor graphics.
  • Sleeking – The process of adding foil, holographic effects or even glossy and dull finishes by way of digital ink adhesion. This is done by digitally printing a rich black area where the user wants the sleeking to take place. The machine registers this and only adheres to this specific area.

See also

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References

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What is digital printing process?

Digital printing