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Printing Technology 5th Revised edition [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 560 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x208x30 mm, weight: 1112 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Jun-2001
  • Leidėjas: Delmar Cengage Learning
  • ISBN-10: 076682232X
  • ISBN-13: 9780766822320
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 560 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x208x30 mm, weight: 1112 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Jun-2001
  • Leidėjas: Delmar Cengage Learning
  • ISBN-10: 076682232X
  • ISBN-13: 9780766822320
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
This guide for students of printing emphasizes how digital technologies are revolutionizing the industry. The volume begins with an overview of traditional analog printing methods, such as foundry type and traditional layout and pasteup. The authors then proceed to current and emerging technologies. A sampling of topics includes inkjet technologies, digital workflow concerns, production control, demographic binding, health and safety issues, and job estimating. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Printing Technology takes readers on a journey from the beginnings of the graphic arts industry through today's cutting-edge digital technology. Now in its fifth edition, this popular book has been reorganized to provide readers with a firmer grasp of how digital printing technologies are revolutionizing the industry. Traditional analog printing methods are reviewed in the first six chapters, establishing the foundation from which readers will develop an understanding of the state-of-the-art technological infrastructure for digital publishing that supports today's new, digital workflow. Subsequent chapters lead readers through the complexities of digital data, digital prepress operations, printing techniques, and finishing options. Since technology has also impacted the way business is conducted today, this edition also features information on computer estimating and job tracking, plus use of the internet as a portal for connecting printing facilities with customers, vendors, and suppliers. Discussion of customer-defined quality management, including introductions to total quality management (TQM) and statistical process control (SPC) techniques, is also included in the final chapter to ensure long-term success in this highly technical, fast-changing, and increasingly competitive field.
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
The Printing Industry
1(16)
Printing Technology
5(4)
Size and Scope of the Printing Industry
9(3)
Organization of Printing Services
12(3)
Preparing for a Career in Printing
15(2)
The Tradition of Foundry Type
17(12)
Foundry Type Composition
19(6)
Machine Composition of Hot Type
25(4)
Basic Design and Traditional Preparation
29(30)
Design Considerations
31(20)
Alphabet Design
34(7)
Type Copy
41(3)
Traditional Art Copy
44(4)
Design Steps
48(3)
Traditional Layout and Pasteup
51(8)
Surfaces, Materials, and Tools for Traditional Layout and Pasteup
52(2)
Types of Art
54(1)
Working with Photographs
54(1)
Working from the Rough Layout
55(1)
Single-Color and Multicolor Pasteup
55(4)
Traditional Line and Halftone Photography
59(34)
Line Photography
61(11)
The Nature of Light
61(5)
Camera Fundamentals
66(3)
Film Processing
69(3)
Halftone Photography
72(21)
Density, Tone, and Contrast
72(3)
Densitometry
75(4)
Traditional Halftone Screens
79(10)
Areas of a Continuous-Tone Print
89(1)
Understanding Halftone Dots
90(3)
Color
93(13)
Basic Color Theory
94(6)
Halftone Dots and Color
100(1)
Color Masking
101(1)
UCR and GCR
102(4)
Traditional Image Assembly and Platemaking
106(33)
Traditional Image Assembly
107(22)
Stripping Transparent Materials
107(2)
Imposition
109(3)
Elementary Stripping Techniques
112(8)
Multiflat Registration
120(5)
Proofing Transparent Materials
125(4)
Offset Platemaking
129(10)
Equipment for Proofing and Plating
129(3)
Lithographic Printing Plates
132(2)
Surface Plates
134(5)
Working with Digital Data
139(23)
The Concept of Digital Information
141(2)
Computer Basics
143(4)
Moving and Storing Data
147(12)
Digital Workflow
159(3)
Digital Prepress: Creation and Input
162(20)
Digital Image Types
163(5)
File Formats
168(3)
Digital Image Input
171(7)
Digital Photography
178(4)
Digital Prepress: Assembly
182(20)
Page Layout
183(3)
Illustration and Image-Editing Software
186(3)
Fonts
189(1)
Preflight
190(1)
Digital Halftones
191(4)
Color
195(3)
Color Management
198(4)
Digital Prepress: Output
202(20)
PostScript
203(1)
Portable Document Format
204(2)
Imposition and Trapping
206(3)
Output to Film
209(2)
Digital Proofing
211(3)
Computer to Plate
214(3)
Output to the Internet
217(2)
Databasing and Archiving
219(3)
Printing Presses: An Overview
222(39)
Press Development
224(4)
Understanding Offset Press Operation
228(1)
The Systems Approach to Learning about Presses
229(13)
Multicolor Sheet-Fed Presses
242(6)
Web Offset Presses
248(10)
Toward Total Automation
258(3)
Offset Press
261(32)
Section 1
263(17)
Offset Press Operation
263(10)
Printing Process Color on Sheet-Fed Offset Presses
273(1)
Quality Control Devices
274(6)
Section 2
280(13)
Roller and Blanket Problems and Adjustments
280(4)
Common Press Concerns
284(6)
A Troubleshooting Checklist
290(1)
Press Maintenance
291(2)
Screen Printing
293(37)
Section 1
294(18)
Basic Concept and Classification of Stencils
294(2)
Fabric and Frame Preparation
296(6)
Photographic Stencil Methods
302(9)
Masking the Stencil
311(1)
Section 2
312(18)
Squeegee and Ink Considerations
312(3)
Basic Screen Printing Process
315(6)
Halftone Reproduction in Screen Printing
321(2)
High-Speed Production Presses
323(2)
Special Machine Configurations
325(5)
Gravure Printing
330(22)
The Gravure Industry
333(1)
Basic Gravure Concepts
334(6)
Cylinder Construction and Preparation
340(4)
Gravure Presswork
344(5)
Trends in Gravure
349(3)
Flexographic, Ink-Jet, and Digital Presses
352(25)
Flexographic Printing
354(12)
Ink-Jet Printing
366(4)
Digital Printing
370(7)
Paper and Ink
377(36)
Paper
379(16)
Introduction to Paper
379(4)
Recycled Paper
383(3)
Classifying Paper
386(4)
Determining Paper Needs
390(3)
Sample Paper Estimating Problem
393(1)
Determining the Price of Paper
394(1)
Ink
395(18)
Properties of Ink
395(1)
Ingredients in Ink
396(2)
Calculating Ink Usage
398(2)
Ink Specifications and Standards
400(1)
Lithographic Inks
401(4)
Screen Printing Inks
405(4)
Letterpress Inks
409(1)
Flexographic Inks
410(1)
Gravure Inks
410(1)
Ultraviolet-Curing Inks
411(2)
Finishing Operations
413(23)
Cutting
415(3)
Folding
418(2)
Special Letterpress Applications
420(2)
Assembling
422(3)
Binding
425(5)
In-Line Finishing
430(1)
Demographic Binding
431(2)
Packaging and Shipping
433(3)
The Business of Printing
436(27)
Determining Real Printing Costs
438(8)
Job Estimating
446(1)
Production Planning
447(5)
Computer-Based Management Tools
452(7)
E-Management
459(4)
Customer-Defined Quality Management
463(30)
Defining Quality
465(2)
Motivation for a Customer-Defined Quality Orientation
467(5)
The Principles of Customer-Defined Quality Management
472(1)
The Typical TQM Process
473(2)
Statistical Process Control
475(3)
The Problem-Solving Process
478(2)
Group Processes
480(3)
Appendixes
Appendix A Color Temperature
483(2)
Appendix B Finding Information Resources in the Graphic Arts
485(7)
Appendix C Health and Safety Issues
492(1)
Glossary 493(20)
Bibliography 513(8)
Index 521