
Printing Technologies and Applications
Description
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Print is all around us and plays a vital role in our lives. It provides the means to communicate messages cheaply and with impact. It is an important vehicle for advertising, education, entertainment, information and plays a substantial role in modern manufacturing. Even though it is still mostly done on paper, print is applied to all kinds of substrates, from silk to steel, plastic to glass. In this book, the interactions between printing method, ink and substrate surface will be discussed in order to achieve optimal results and durability.
In Part 1, print is defined. Its history and influence on society and technology are explored. In Part 2, historic and modern embodiments of different printing methods organized by substrates are discussed. In Part 3, the scientific foundations of ink-making and printing are elucidated.
Part 1 and Part 2 give an overview of printing methods and are suitable for the general reader interested in the field, but have enough technical information for the expert academic/industrial reader to consider different printing approaches for their fields of expertise. Part 3 is aimed at PhD students and industry professionals who want to understand the workflow requirements of printing on different substrates and will provide technical specifications for the expert user to develop their own printing methods.
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Persons
Susanne Klein is a physicist by training and has worked as a Royal Society Research Associate at the University of Bristol, and then as a Senior Research Scientist at Hewlett Packard Labs Bristol. With her expertise in colloidal chemistry, optics and 3D printing, she is working on the reinvention of old printing technologies, such as Woodburytype and Lippmann photography, which will allow production of high-quality prints for advertising, packaging, fashion and, at the same time, include fake-proof security features.
Carinna Parraman's understanding of 2.5D printing has evolved through her training in fine art print-making. She is Professor of Design Colour and Printing and Director at the Centre for Fine Print Research. She has in-depth knowledge of traditional colour mixing, colour printing and photomechanical printing processes. She collaborates with many different sectors including industry, heritage and fine-art print.
Content
Part 1. Fundamentals of printing
1.1 What is printing?
1.2 What is a print?
1.3 Different printing technologies
1.4 What is the future of printing?
Part 2. Printing on different substrates
2.1 Printing on paper, from art to industrial scale, from toilet paper to money
2.2 Printing on ceramics and metal, from tableware to tiles
2.3 Printing on plastic
2.4 Printing on textiles
Part 3. The physics and chemistry of printing
3.1. The physics of the transfer of ink to the substrate
3.2. The drying of ink on different substrates
3.3 Different formulations for different inks
3.4 Rheology of inks
3.5 The influence of the substrate, printing method and pigment choice on the appearance of the print
System requirements
File format: ePUB
Copy protection: without DRM (Digital Rights Management)
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