Frankly Speaking: The Rise of the Full-Color Book
Why digital full color no longer means sacrificing quality.
By
Frank Romano
That brings us to a second approach to digital color printing: the so-called B2 printer, also known as a 4-up printer, because the sheet size is as large as four standard sheets, which greatly increases output. Indigo demonstrated a prototype in 1998 but did not introduce a machine until 2012. They call it the 10000 (yes, machine names are now going to 5 digits). The HP Indigo 10000 is now in beta testing, and early users are singing its praises.
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Frank Romano
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Frank Romano is Professor Emeritus at RIT School of Media Sciences.
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%0D%0A%20%20Before%20we%20go%20further,%20let's%20define%20some%20terms,%20as%20printers%20are,%20in%20essence,%20quite%20different%20from%20presses.%20Printers%20regenerate%20the%20impression%20for%20each%20copy%20from%20a%20digital%20file,%20which%20allows%20them%20to%20use%20electronic%20collation%20and%20print%20the%20pages%20of%20a%20book%20block%20in%20order.%20Presses,%20on%20the%20other%20hand,%20use%20a%20physical%20image%20carrier%20(a%20plate)%20to%20reproduce%20large%20printed%20sheets%20which%20are%20folded%20into%20signatures,%20gathered%20and%20bound.%20But%20printers%20become,%20in%20essence,%20presses%20when%20either%20the%20sheet%20size%20or%20output%20speed%20starts%20to%20approach%20the%20specs%20of%20an%20analog%20reproduction%20device%20(aka%20a%20press).%20A%20"printer%2Fpress"%20is%20my%20term%20for%20printers%20that%20have%20many%20characteristics%20of%20a%20press.<%2Fspan>%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fthe-rise-full-color-book%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="1410" type="icon_link"> Email Email
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