Business Print Services Ltd

Business Print Services Ltd Visit: www.businessprintservices.co.uk
For a helpful and friendly service providing quality printing at a competitive price.

Business Print Services are a Kent based team of professionals committed to providing our customers quality printing, promptly, consistently and competitively priced. Using our own dedicated vans and drivers we deliver daily to customers all over London and the South East.

18/12/2021
12/06/2018
05/04/2018

Before printing, monks would painstakingly handwrite copies of the bible and religious scriptures. Knowledge was confined to the very few who could read and write, therefore education was scarcely available.

The invention of printing is considered as one of the most important advancements in human history as it gave knowledge freedom. For the first time people were able to communicate and educate. The written word, now published at an industrial scale, became available to the masses. This encourage a culture of education, invention and innovation

Today, two main types of printing method exist; Litho and Digital.

This post will explain when each process should be used and why.
Offset Litho Printing, What is Offset Litho?

Offset Litho is method of printing at an industrial scale in which inks are transferred onto aluminum plates to make an
impression.
The process:

1) All printed colour images are made up of primary colours: CYAN (blue)
MAGENTA (red)
YELLOW and the Key colour Black (CMYK).
The design (artwork) is set-up on a computer and all the colours on the artwork are separated into CMYK and sent to the plate making facility.

2) The artwork, now split into 4 individual colours, are exposed just like a photograph onto photosensitive aluminum sheets, known as ‘Plates’.

Each Colour = 1 Plate

3) The Plates are collected by the printer and inserted into the press by clipping onto a roller.

Each plate is coated with its corresponding colour by a smaller ink roller. The coloured image is rolled or ‘offset’ onto a cylinder (blanket), which makes an impression on paper being fed through the press.

As the paper moves through each set of rollers, the colours mix to create a full colour image on the page.

4) The pages are guillotined and collated. They are then taken to the finishing department for binding, punching, numbering etc.
When would Litho be used?

Because of the various processes involved, Offset Litho printing can become costly. This method of printing is best suited for lager quantities of printed pages, such as: books, magazines, newspapers etc.

An advantage of Offset litho is the ability to use spot (PANTONE) colours in the same way a process colour (CMYK) would be used. Spot colours are standardised, which ensures consistency. For example, a Red 032U printed in China, will look identical to a Red 032U printed in England (providing they are printed on a similar paper).

Spot (PANTONE) colours are important for companies who want to ensure complete brand consistency on all their printed material, such as letterheads.

Spot can also can achieve colours that CMYK can’t, such as bright orange, fluorescent pink, gold etc.

Digital printers are unable to print spot colours and so the hues and tones of the inks will differ from printer to printer.

Offset litho also offers a higher quality print and can print large areas of solid colour.
In summary:

Cost effective at Large Quantities
Better Print Quality
Print on a large variety of stock
Print Spot (PANTONE) colours
Print large areas of solid colour

Digital Printing
What is Digital Printing?

Digital printing methods include inkjet or laser printers that deposit pigment or toner onto the paper.
The process

Unlike Offset Litho, the digital process does not require the use of plates and so it offers an earlier and faster method of printing. Although the cost per sheet is higher using digital, this price is offset by the cost saving of avoiding all the technical steps, time and personnel required to print Litho.

Digital Presses use CMYK process colours, unlike Litho, however they are applied at the same time by the machine.

Quite often Digital presses have the ability to cut, collate, and bind too, saving huge amounts of time and effort.
In summary:

Cost effective at Smaller Quantities
CMYK Process Colours
Reduced Quality
Limited choices of stock
Faster turnaround

05/04/2017
02/07/2015

When email and the internet started to become increasingly commonplace in the early 1990s, doom-mongers claimed that it would be the death of print.

Rather than killing off print once and for all, a growing number of brands are starting to realise that digital simply cannot compete with ink on paper – to the extent that some purely online brands are launching printed products.

So why are so many brands suddenly turning to print in this increasingly digital era? “Some brands are coming back because we believe they found their switch to digital advertising saved them money, but wasn’t as productive,” says Patrick Headley, managing director at GI Solutions. “They are now increasingly including print and mail in their campaigns to improve response rates, but as integrated campaigns using many channels to market as appropriate for their customers.”

Based on the number of companies that have already done a u-turn on previous decisions and come back to print, it’s clear that the channel is still considered a viable route to market by some and has a key role to play, but it has to work harder than ever and will have to keep on adapting and changing going forwards, if it wants to continue to justify its position in the marketing mix.

By Simon Creasey, Monday 15 June 2015 PrintWeek

Address

Sevenoaks
TN156EL

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 5pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 5pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 5pm
Thursday 7:30am - 5pm
Friday 7:30am - 5pm

Telephone

+441474853388

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