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Copying processes --- Electronics in color printing --- Nonimpact printing --- Color printing --- Clip art --- Desktop publishing --- Clip art. --- Color printing. --- Copying processes. --- Desktop publishing. --- Electronics in color printing. --- Nonimpact printing.
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Copying processes --- Electronics in color printing --- Nonimpact printing --- Color printing --- Clip art --- Desktop publishing --- Clip art. --- Color printing. --- Copying processes. --- Desktop publishing. --- Electronics in color printing. --- Nonimpact printing.
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At present the textile industry produces the majority of its 34 billion square yards of printed textile fabric by screen printing. However as we move into the digital age developments in digital printing of paper are being adapted more and more for the textile market. Inkjet textile printing is growing while growth in analog textile printing remains stagnant. As digital print technologies improve offering faster production and larger cost-effective print runs, digital printing will grow to become the technology that provides the majority of the world’s printed textiles. This comprehensive introduction to the subject is broken into five sections. After two introductory chapters, it goes on to look in a number of detailed chapters at printer and print head technologies. The next section examines the printer software required for successful colour design and management. The digital printing colouration process is explored next, with chapters on substrate preparation, pigmented ink, aqueous inkjet ink, pre-treatment and printing on cationized cotton with reactive inks. The book is concluded with three chapters on the design and business aspect of digital printing. Digital printing of textiles contains fundamental technical explanations along with recent research, and is an invaluable guide for product developers, retailers, designers and academic researchers.
Textile printing. --- Digital printing. --- Nonimpact printing --- Printing, Textile --- Printing --- Textile industry
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Textile printing. --- Digital printing. --- Nonimpact printing --- Printing, Textile --- Printing --- Textile industry
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Digital printing. --- Textile printing. --- Printing, Textile --- Printing --- Textile industry --- Nonimpact printing
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Copying processes --- Electronics in color printing --- Nonimpact printing --- Color printing --- Clip art --- Desktop publishing
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Copying processes --- Electronics in color printing --- Nonimpact printing --- Color printing --- Clip art --- Desktop publishing --- Clip art. --- Color printing. --- Copying processes. --- Desktop publishing. --- Electronics in color printing. --- Nonimpact printing. --- DTP (Desktop publishing) --- Layout (Printing) --- Electronic publishing --- Word processing --- Graphic arts --- Printing --- Impactless printing --- Non-impact printing --- Autographic processes --- Commercial correspondence --- Duplicating processes --- Manifolding --- Reproduction processes --- Reprography --- Typewriting --- Writing --- Copying --- Copying services --- Documentation --- Letter services --- Computer programs --- Data processing --- Industrial economics --- Computer. Automation --- Art --- Engineering --- Library and Information Sciences --- Electronics --- General and Others --- #TS:WDEP
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Written to fill a perceived gap in technology history, the author seeks not only to document but also to celebrate the role digital printing has taken in the dissemination of ideas and images. Containing background and instructional material, Part One first examines the roots of digital printing and then the various technologies, applications and broad changes in both the products and the industry over the fifty years from 1950 to 2000. In Part Two, each decade is closely examined by focusing on one or two industry-changing companies, following their contributions from their inception to the present day. From Adobe to Xerox, from IBM and GE to Dataproducts and Printronix, the stories of these entrepreneurs and managers who helped make this revolution happen unfold, many times in their own words. A review of the patterns and lesson learned and a look into the future of digital printing comprise Part Three, followed by a glossary, a bibliography and an index.
Computer printers --- Digital printing --- 655.28.022.36 --- 655.41:681.3 --- 655.41:681.3 Electronic publishing --- Electronic publishing --- Nonimpact printing --- Printers, Computer --- Printers (Data processing systems) --- Computer input-output equipment --- Printing machinery and supplies --- History --- Desktop publishing. Electronic publishing --- Digitaal drukken --- Druktechnieken (geschiedenis) --- Druktechniek --- Geschiedenis --- Geneeskunde --- Techniek (wetenschap) --- Atlas --- Museum --- Ecologie
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Color computer graphics --- Color in design --- Color printing --- Digital printing --- Graphic design (Typography) --- Image processing --- 684.5 --- druktechnieken --- Digital image processing --- Digital electronics --- Typographic design --- Design --- Printing --- Layout (Printing) --- Nonimpact printing --- Color graphics, Computer --- Computer color graphics --- Computer graphics --- Digital techniques --- verwerkende industrie, grafische techniek, drukken --- Graphics industry --- graphic design
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