Printing and reprographic technologies Books
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Printmaking for Beginners
Book SynopsisA practical and inspirational book of printmaking techniques and modern working practices. This book is your basic and essential guide to a wide range of printmaking techniques. Through step-by-step instructions, it covers the processes of monotype, relief, intaglio, collagraph, screenprinting and lithography, explaining basic methods and recommending tools, types of paper, equipment and materials necessary for each, as well as highlighting safe and sensible working practices. A handy chapter also teaches you how to edition and frame your prints. This new, expanded edition covers modern working practices and recent techniques such as printing with carborundum. Designed as a practical book, it is also full of inspiration for all budding printmakers.Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction 1. Monotype 2. Relief printing 3. Intaglio printing 4. Making carborundum prints 5. Collagraph 6. Screenprinting 7. Lithography 8. Editioning and framing your prints Glossary of terms, techniques, materials Bibliography List of suppliers Index
£17.00
John Wiley & Sons Inc 3D Printing For Dummies
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsIntroduction 1 Part 1: Getting Started with 3D Printing 5 Chapter 1: Seeing How 3D Printers Fit into Modern Manufacturing 7 Chapter 2: Exploring the Types of 3D Printing 19 Chapter 3: Exploring Applications of 3D Printing 31 Part 2: Outlining 3D-Printing Resources 47 Chapter 4: Identifying Available Materials for 3D Printing 49 Chapter 5: Identifying Sources and Communities for 3D-Printable Objects 67 Part 3: Exploring the Business Side of 3D Printing 83 Chapter 6: 3D Printing for Everyone 85 Chapter 7: Understanding 3D Printing’s Effect on Traditional Lines of Business 97 Chapter 8: Reviewing 3D-Printing Research 107 Part 4: Employing Personal 3D-Printing Devices 119 Chapter 9: Exploring 3D-Printed Artwork 121 Chapter 10: Considering Consumer-Level Desktop 3D Printers 129 Chapter 11: Deciding on a 3D Printer of Your Own 157 Part 5: Understanding and Using Your 3D Printer 197 Chapter 12: Assembling Kits and Reviewing Machine Setup 199 Chapter 13: Understanding 3D Printer Control Electronics 219 Chapter 14: Understanding, Using, and Servicing 3D Printers 251 Chapter 15: Identifying Software and Calibrating Your 3D Printer 293 Chapter 16: Refining the Design and 3D-Printing Process 337 Part 6: The Part of Tens 371 Chapter 17: Ten Examples of Direct Digital Manufacturing and Personalization 373 Chapter 18: Ten Impossible Designs Created Using Additive Manufacturing 379 Index 385
£18.39
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Model Building and Super Detailing
Book SynopsisThis book in the railway modelling series drills deeper into the tips and techniques that can be utilised by the modern modeller to produce a detailed and cohesive model railway. Through rich and varied imagery from the Market Deeping club, British and international examples, a number of different styles of scenery are covered. Subject chapters include locations from open country to heavy industry. Background and foreground tricks to draw the eye, that difficult to emulate water feature, and composing your scenes as independent units for later inclusion. Use is made of construction examples as varied as a tube station in OO to a farm in N. The basics of plastic stock kit building, adapting a model with a detailing kit, as well as scratch build from spare parts are demonstrated. Whilst 3D printing feels an impossible dream for many, practical ownership and operation of both thermal extrusion and resin based 3D printers is covered. With demonstration examples from the very basic, such as
£32.11
O'Reilly Media Make Technology on Your Time V42
Book SynopsisThis year's crop of printers features sleek, high-tech looks coupled with increasingly sophisticated interfaces that lower the barrier of entry to a wider range of new users. We'll show buyers how to pick the best printer for their needs, how to use it effectively, and how to fix problems when they arise.
£12.89
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc New Directions in Print Culture Studies
Book SynopsisNew Directions in Print Culture Studies features new methods and approaches to cultural and literary history that draw on periodicals, print culture, and material culture, thus revising and rewriting what we think we know about the aesthetic, cultural, and social history of transnational America. The unifying questions posed and answered in this book are methodological: How can we make material, archival objects meaningful? How can we engage and contest dominant conceptions of aesthetic, historical, and literary periods? How can we present archival material in ways that make it accessible to other scholars and students? What theoretical commitments does a focus on material objects entail? New Directions in Print Culture Studies brings together leading scholars to address the methodological, historical, and theoretical commitments that emerge from studying how periodicals, books, images, and ideas circulated from the 19th century to the present. Reaching beyond national boTrade ReviewNew Directions in Print Culture Studies delivers on the promise to make its reader see the field anew. This volume's illuminating case studies are deeply researched and theoretically sophisticated, intellectually honest and, at moments, delightfully weird. A wonderful overview for seasoned and curious scholars alike. * Jordan Alexander Stein, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Fordham University, USA *This rich collection both argues for and amply demonstrates the centrality of print culture to scholarship and pedagogy in the 21st century. In this volume, Schwartz and Worden give us an edgily political, unabashedly nerdy, and theoretically capacious conception of what print culture studies is and can be. The engaging and provocative essays found therein take up objects of inquiry from cartes de visites to bullet journals, from story papers to multimodal websites. They consider capitalism and counterpublics, comics and collections, sound and medium, celebrity and canonicity, multilingualism and hemispheric studies, pedagogy and activism. The clarity and precision of the chapters make this collection classroom-ready. These provocations will also serve as inspirations and entry points for scholars in the field hungry for just such an invitation to connect the print artifacts of the past in all their formal and material specificity to the urgent matters of the present. These “new directions” are awfully fun to explore. * Catherine Keyser, Professor of English, University of South Carolina, USA *An indispensable guide, New Directions in Print Culture Studies gathers 16 case studies that feature inventive enactments of and critical reflections on the methodologies that have enabled this radically interdisciplinary mode of analysis to transform scholarly production across the humanities and social sciences. * Donald E. Pease, Ted & Helen Geisel Professor of the Humanities, Dartmouth College, USA *Table of ContentsList of Figures Acknowledgments Introduction: Archives, Materiality, and Modern American Culture (Jesse W. Schwartz, LaGuardia Community College, USA, and Daniel Worden, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA) I. Print Culture's Past and Presents 1. Story-Paper Origins in the US: The Unknown Public and The New York Ledger (Ayendy Bonifacio, University of Toledo, USA) 2. “And They Think A Strike Is War”: John Reed, Metropolitan Magazine, and Radical Seriality Against the Editors (Jesse W. Schwartz, LaGuardia Community College, USA) 3. Laying the Type of Revolution: Historicizing US Feminism in and through Print Culture (Agatha Beins, Texas Woman’s University, USA) 4. The Instant Classic in the Age of Digital Print Culture: Claude McKay’s Romance in Marseille (Gary Edward Holcomb, Ohio University, USA) 5. The Real Productivity: Creative Refusal and Cultish Tendencies in Online Print Journal Communities (Michelle Chihara, Whittier College, USA) II. Archives, Exhibits, Images, and Sounds of Print Culture 6. Hold Still: "Redeemed" and Coming Undone (Monica Huerta, Princeton University, USA) 7. Engraving Class: Gender, Race, and the Pictorial Politics of the 1877 General Strike (Justin Rogers-Cooper, LaGuardia Community College, USA) 8. Sounding: Black Print Culture at the Edges of the Black Atlantic (Kristin Moriah, Queen’s University, Canada) 9. “A Traveling Exhibition”: Magazines and the Display and Circulation of Art in the Americas (Lori Cole, New York University, USA) 10. Comics in the Archive: Approaches to the April 1956 Newsstand (Daniel Worden, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA, and Rebekah Walker) 11. Icons and Archives: James Baldwin and the Practice of Celebrity (Robert F. Reid-Pharr, Harvard University, USA) III. Print Culture Studies in Practice 12. Reimagining Literary History and Why It Matters Now (Kelley Kreitz, Pace University, USA) 13. Anthologizing Alternatives: June Jordan and Toni Cade Bambara’s Publishing Pedagogies (Danica Savonick, SUNY Cortland, USA) 14. Hybrid Scholarly Publishing Models in a Digital Age (Krystyna Michael, The CUNY Graduate Center, USA, Jojo Karlin, The CUNY Graduate Center, USA, and Matthew K. Gold, The CUNY Graduate Center, USA) Index
£90.25
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc The Gutenberg Parenthesis
Book SynopsisPROSE AWARDS MEDIA ADN CULTURAL STUDIES FINALIST 2024The Gutenberg Parenthesis traces the epoch of print from its fateful beginnings to our digital present and draws out lessons for the age to come.The age of print is a grand exception in history. For five centuries it fostered what some call print culture a worldview shaped by the completeness, permanence, and authority of the printed word. As a technology, print at its birth was as disruptive as the digital migration of today. Now, as the internet ushers us past print culture, journalist Jeff Jarvis offers important lessons from the era we leave behind.To understand our transition out of the Gutenberg Age, Jarvis first examines the transition into it. Tracking Western industrialized print to its origins, he explores its invention, spread, and evolution, as well as the bureaucracy and censorship that followed. He also reveals how print gave rise to the idea of the mass mass media, mass markeTrade ReviewAn accomplished and detailed survey of life between the brackets. * Wall Street Journal *A refreshingly sanguine take. -- Houman Barekat * The Guardian *Provocative and fizzing with ideas. -- Alan Rusbridger * Prospect *The Gutenberg Parenthesis follows the development of printing and its impact on society right up to the present day … Jarvis’s tempo is … fast and compelling, sweeping the reader along from Gutenberg to the present digital predicament facing society. -- Richard Ovenden * Financial Times *Jeff Jarvis is the ideal guide for this fast-paced history of communication. Shrewd, witty and always generous to his fellow authors, this book is crammed with pointed observation and profound reflection on the present and future of information culture. As print transitions to the digital age, Jarvis explores the potentialities and dangers of unbridled access to information as a realist who sees a path to sanity as our media turbulence finds a new normal. * Andrew Pettegree, Wardlaw Professor of History, University of St. Andrews, UK *Puts a sharp focus on how journalism will evolve in the digital age. * It's All Journalism *Jeff Jarvis magisterially charts how the invention of printing shifted power from individuals and communities to experts and the undifferentiated 'masses,' and then brilliantly shows how the internet is reversing this half-millenium shift. Information in print became a controlled commodity with enforced scarcity that reinforced language and institutional borders and power. Initially extending the reach of thought, printing shaped that thought; the medium became the message, on steroids. Digital now makes possible and even insists upon richer, less controlled exchange of ideas, including fakes. What we need, Jarvis makes clear, is not censorship of our chaotic global conversation but clear goals, guardrails, and institutions to ensure inclusion, accuracy, and privacy. We are all facing this together, and are now all on notice to take up Jarvis' challenge. * Anthony Marx, President and CEO, New York Public Library *Jeff Jarvis’ The Gutenberg Parenthesis invites disenchanted media users to scour the history of print for lessons that may help us build a better future for media. No one has thought as nimbly as Jarvis about how communications shape societies, and his polemic gives hope for these disenchanted times. * Leah Price, Henry Rutgers Distinguished Professor of English, Rutgers University, USA *Table of ContentsPart I. THE GUTENBERG PARENTHESIS 1. The Parenthesis 2. Print’s Presumptions 3. Trepidation Part II. INSIDE THE PARENTHESIS 4. What Came Before 5. How to Print 6. Gutenberg 7. After the Bible 8. Print Spreads 9. The Troubles 10. Creation with Print 11. The Birth of the Newspaper 12. Print Evolves: Until 1800 13. Aesthetics of Print 14. Steam and the Mechanization of Print 15. Electricity and the Industrialization of Media 16. The Meaning of It All Part III. LEAVING THE PARENTHESIS 17. Conversation vs. Content 18. Death to the Mass 19. Creativity and Control 20. Institutional Revolutions Afterword: And What of the Book? Acknowledgements Notes Bibliography Index Colophon
£19.00
University of Massachusetts Press Reading Books: Essays on the Material Text and
Book SynopsisThis collection takes as its point of departure the proposition that one can, in fact, tell a book by its cover. The contributors examine the ways in which the material qualities of books―including typography, paper, bindings, layout , and promotional copy―as well as their editing, production, and distribution profoundly affect how they have been read and understood.The volume includes essays on the publishing history of Melville's early novels, Twain's The Innocents Abroad, the Tauchnitz edition of Hawthornes's The Marble Faun, and Jackson's Romona. Other chapters examine the reception of Dante's works in America, Houghton Mifflin's biographical series, the binding styles of Ticknor and Fields, and the packaging of literature for American high Schools., reviewing a previous edition or volume
£35.24
Royal Society of Chemistry 3D Printing in Chemical Sciences: Applications
Book Synopsis3D printing has rapidly established itself as an essential enabling technology within research and industrial chemistry laboratories. Since the early 2000s, when the first research papers applying this technique began to emerge, the uptake by the chemistry community has been both diverse and extraordinary, and there is little doubt that this fascinating technology will continue to have a major impact upon the chemical sciences going forward. This book provides a timely and extensive review of the reported applications of 3D Printing techniques across all fields of chemical science. Describing, comparing, and contrasting the capabilities of all the current 3D printing technologies, this book provides both background information and reader inspiration, to enable users to fully exploit this developing technology further to advance their research, materials and products. It will be of interest across the chemical sciences in research and industrial laboratories, for chemists and engineers alike, as well as the wider science community.Trade ReviewThe authors start, apart from the preface, with a general chapter and introduction to 3D printing. This covers the terms used, the depth of the subject and a very useful time scale up to 2017 showing the developments, or lack of them! The chapter gives the reader a good introduction as to what to expect, the problems, and gives an insight as to the direction the authors are going to lead the reader. The section on printing chromatography stationary phases is excellent. This, for me, is the way forward and this section describes what has been done—how we haven’t reached a usable product as yet—but how, maybe, we can get there. In conclusion, yes this is a must buy book to provide scientists, but especially chemists an insight as to what is available now and the possibilities of 3D printing. It will also inform and make you think of what can/could be achieved using 3D printing. -- Peter Myers, University of Liverpool * Chromatographia, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10337-019-03788-9 *Table of ContentsAn Introduction to 3D Printing; 3D Printing of Micro- and Macro-fluidic Devices; 3D-printed Analytical Detectors; 3D Printing in Analytical Chemistry Methods and Applications; 3D Printing in Pharmaceutical Chemistry; 3D Printing in Biochemistry; 3D Printing in Synthetic and Physical Chemistry; 3D Printing in Chemical Education; Subject Index
£151.05
Random House USA Inc S****y Printers: A Humorous History of the Most
Book SynopsisWe all hate printers. This book documents why. Maybe it's the behemoth copier at work. Or the one you use to print boarding passes at home. Or maybe it's the one that haunts your nightmares to this day, the one that never seemed to work, not since the first day you plugged it in. We all have a printer in our lives that we would love to see taken down a notch. From the first consumer inkjet to more modern monstrosities, Sh*tty Printers breaks down the worst offenders of our home offices. Featuring popular and exasperating home staples such as: • The HP Thinkjet 2225A • The Lexmark Z22 • The long forgotten Canon BJC-85 • and many more Each printer is beautifully photographed and ruthlessly torn to shreds as their individual strengths, weaknesses, and charisma are scored on sliding scales born from relatable frustration.Trade Review"You can print from an iPhone. It's the dumbest thing." -Bo Fahs, writer and host of Tele-Friends "This book is fake news." -HP (Probably)
£11.04
Otto Ottographic illustrations for The Economist:
Book Synopsis
£15.20
Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH Inkjet Printing in Industry: Materials,
Book SynopsisThis handbook provides an indispensable overview of all essential aspects of industrial-scale inkjet printing. Inkjet printing, as a scalable deposition technique, has grown in popularity due to its being additive, digital, and contact-free. Given these advantages, the technology can now be used in stable and mature industrial-scale applications. As the mechanisms for inkjet printing have improved, so too have the versatility and applicability of this machinery within industry. The handbook's coverage includes inks, printhead technology, substrates, metrology, software, as well as machine integration and pre- and post-processing approaches. This information is complemented by an overview of printing strategies and application development and covers technological advances in packaging, security printing, printed electronics, robotics, 3D printing, and bioprinting. Important topics like standardisation, regulatory requirements, ecological aspects, and patents. Readers will find: The most comprehensive work on the topic with over 75 chapters and more than 1,500 pages relating to inkjet printing technology The inkjet-printing expertise of corporate development engineers and academic researchers in one manual A hands-on approach utilizing case studies, success stories, and practical hints that allow the reader direct, first-hand experience with the power of inkjet printing technology. The ideal resource for material scientists, engineering scientists in industry, electronic engineers, and surface and solid-state chemists,Inkjet Printing in Industry is an all-in-one tool for modern professionals and researchers alike.Table of ContentsVolume 1 Preface xxvii Part I Introduction 1 1 Detailed Overview Over the Book Chapters 3Werner Zapka Part II Fundamentals 17 2 Wood-Graining Effects in Inkjet Printing 19Stephen D. Hoath 3 Can We Determine the Reliable Jetting Performance from an Inkjet Ink? 45Patrick J. Smith Part III Pros and Cons of Inkjet Printing 57 4 Comparing Inkjet with Other Printing Processes, Mainly Screen Printing 59Gunter Huebner, Ingo Reinhold, Wolfgang Voit, Olivier Buergy, Ron Askeland, John Corrall, and Werner Zapka Part IV Inks 93 5 Inkjet Ink Formulations: Overview and Fundamentals 95Alexander Kamyshny, Enrico Sowade, and Shlomo Magdassi 6 UV-Curable Alkenyl Monomers and Oligomers -- The Backbone Chemistry of UV Inkjet Inks 125Jürgen Baro and Christoph Fleckenstein 7 Photoinitiators for UV Inkjet Applications 199Kurt Dietliker and Zhiquan Li 8 UV-Curable Inkjet Inks and Their Applications in Industrial Inkjet Printing, Including Low-Migration Inks for Food Packaging 279Marc Graindourze 9 UV-Curable Inkjet Inks for Label Printing -- Case Study: Labelfire 340 303Thomas Paul 10 Electron Beam Curing of Inks and Coatings 323Derek Illsley and Nigel Caiger 11 Dye-Sublimation Inkjet Ink 337Ming Xu 12 Ceramic Inks 357Aarón Martínez and Bastian Rudersdorf 13 Inks for Security Printing 369George Promis, Bruce Carnes, and Thomas Villwock 14 Inks for Conductive Mass Production Digital Printing 381Fernando de la Vega, Abd El Razek Haj Yahia, Simon Melamed, and Ayala Kabla 15 Advanced Inkjet Processes for Optoelectronics (Displays) and Related Applications 405Christine Boeffel, Manuel Gensler, and Armin Wedel 16 Deliberate Formulation for Regulated Markets 435John A. Ortiz, Katja Digweed, Brandi Beverage, and Lisa Nelson 17 Deinking -- How to Get the Ink Off the Paper 449Axel Fischer Part V Printhead Technology 465 18 HP Printhead Technology 467Jim Przybyla and Steve Simske 19 Technology of Konica Minolta's Inkjet Printhead 503Atsushi Tomotake 20 Dimatix Printhead Technology 523Bruce Paulson 21 Xaar's Inkjet Printing Technology and Applications 535Angus Condie and Jürgen Brünahl 22 Seiko's RC1536 Printhead -- Making Jettability Wider 555Aliasgar Eranpurwala 23 Toshiba Tec's Inkjet Printhead Technology 569Kazuki Taira, Masashi Shimosato, and Kouichi Adachi 24 Memjet Printing Technology 585Tom Roetker Volume 2 Preface xxvii Part VI Substrates 605 25 Glass Substrates for Industrial Inkjet Applications 607Thomas Wiegel, Lutz Parthier, and Ulrich Peuchert 26 Coating Substrates to Match Ink Performance and Meet User Requirements 625Patrick Le Galudec 27 Paper and Paper-Based Substrates for Industrial Inkjet Printing 641Wolfgang A. Schmidt, Emanuele Martorana, and Michael Jocher Part VII Metrology 655 28 Measurement of Complex Rheology and Jettability of Inkjet Inks 657Tri Tuladhar 29 Measurements of Inkjet Droplet Size, Velocity, and Angle of Trajectory 695William D. Bachalo 30 Drop Watcher Technology and Print Quality Analysis 717Yair Kipman, Paul Best, and Kyle Pucci 31 Automating Measurement Techniques for Product Development 739James E. Holmes and Eleanor S. Betton 32 Print Quality Control 757Ilias Trachanas 33 UV Radiation Sources, UV Radiation Absorption, and UV Radiation Measurement 769Jürgen Baro and Christoph Fleckenstein 34 Online and Offline Testing of Printheads 801Herman Wijshoff Part VIII Pre/post Processes 821 35 Overview UV Curing, Good Polymerization Process 823Mathias Theiler 36 Priming for Inkjet Printing on Textiles 845Enrico Sowade, Peter Oehme, and Andreas Schoenfeld 37 Pre- and Post-processes 867Dariusz Korzec, Corinna Little, Andrea Werkmann, and Eva Brandes 38 UV Lamps 909Chris Beechey and David Johnson 39 UV LED Ink Curing: UV LED Technology and Solutions for Integration into Industrial Inkjet Printing 933Dirk Exner 40 Das8. UV-Cured Supermatt Surfaces With Low Migration 951Reiner Mehnert 41 Electron Beam Curing -- Know-how and Possibilities for Industrial Inkjet Processes 977Michael Fischer and Mikala Baines 42 Electron Beam (EB) Processing for Industrial Inkjet Printing 1011Masayoshi Ishikawa, Shinjiro Matsui, and Matthias Sachsenhauser 43 IR -- Drying/Processing 1027Kai K. O. Bär 44 Photonic Curing 1051Vahid Akhavan, Kurt Schroder, and Stan Farnsworth Part IX Software/Data 1065 45 Software -- Connecting Industrial Print Hardware with the Outside World 1067Thomas Kirschner, Oliver Luedtke, and Jan Seguda 46 Data Handling 1081Steven J. Simske Part X Machine Integration 1087 47 Inkjet Printing of Solder Mask 1089David Volk, David Hahn, Celia Wenzler, and Kai Keller 48 Machine Integration by Industrial Inkjet Ltd: Lessons Learnt 1111John Corrall 49 Inca's Experience of System Integration 1151Nick Campbell, Will Eve, and Steve Wilson 50 Hymmen Digital Décor Printing 1171Carsten Brinkmeyer 51 Development of Image Quality and Reliability Enhancing Technology for Digital Inkjet Press AccurioJet KM-1 1185Toshiyuki Mizutani, Toshiyuki Takabayashi, Mitsuru Obata, and Toyoaki Sugaya Volume 3 Preface xxv Part XI Printed Electronics 1201 52 Comparison of Analog and Digital Printing Specifically for Printed Electronics 1203Thomas Rohland, Sophie Sauva, Janusz Schinke, and Christoph Kaiser 53 Digital Functional Printing Based on Nano Metal Inks 1231J. Keck, K. Gläser, D. Juric, W. Eberhardt, and A. Zimmermann 54 Inkjet in the PCB-Production 1255Markus Kennert and Jürgen Wolf Part XII Inkjet+Robot 1269 55 Robot-Based Direct Digital Printing on Freeform Surfaces 1271Daniel Fechtig 56 Inkjet-Based Direct-to-Shape Printing with Partial or Full Coverage of the Object -- Technical Challenges and Solutions for Printing Process, Handling Systems, and Workflow 1299Bernhard Buck 57 Xaar 1003 Printhead on Robot Arm 1319Renzo Trip, Olivier Bürgy, and Werner Zapka 58 Robotics for Inkjet-Based 2 1/2 D Printing; Direct-to-Shape 1335Denis Vogel and Danijel Tipura Part XIII 3D Printing 1351 59 3D Printing/Additive Manufacturing 1353Neil Hopkinson and Patrick J. Smith 60 Printed Electronics Going 3D -- An Overview on Structural Electronics 1365Leo Schranzhofer 61 HP's Metal Jet 3D Printing Technology 1391James Stasiak, David Champion, Uday Yadati, and Tim Weber 62 3D Printing of Optics 1403Erik Beckert 63 Continuous Serial 3D Production Platform with a Rotating Platform -- A Completely New Method to Increase the Productivity of AM Systems 1417Hans Mathea and Florian Löbermann 64 3D Printing in the Automotive Industry 1427Dipl.Ing. FH Stefan Beetz Part XIV Bio-printing 1461 65 Industrial Applications of Inkjet Printing in Life Sciences 1463James W. Stasiak, Jason D. White, and Raphael Wenger Part XV Case Studies/Case Examples 1501 66 HP's Inkjet Presses for Industrial Corrugated Packaging 1503Jim Przybyla, Jim Kearns, and Alex Veis 67 Dekron's Direct Printing Technology 1521Alexandra Lyashenko, Robert Weikl, Zsolt Rozsnyai, and Johannes Regensburger 68 Achieving Cost-effective, High-volume Digital Printing of Laminates: Key Component Selection and Test Criteria 1543Jasmine Geerinckx 69 Inkjet-Based Security Printing 1569Franziska Peinze Part XVI Printing Strategies 1583 70 Printing Strategies 1585Steven J. Simske Part XVII Standardization 1595 71 Inkjet-Related Standards: Background and Status 1597Stephen D. Hoath, Kei Hyodo, and Yair Kipman Part XVIII Regulatory Requirements 1623 72 Regulatory and Safety Aspects of Ink Formulation and Use 1625Martin Thompson and Jill Woods Part XIX Ecological Aspects 1647 73 Sustainability and Eco-footprint -- Concepts for the Application of Circular Economy Criteria for Printing Systems and Their Use when Printing on Paper, Labels, and Direct-to-Object 1649Michael Has Part XX Patents 1669 74 Patents on Inkjet Technology and Materials 1671Dr. Adam Strevens 75 Profitable and Continuous Product Innovation Relies on Effective Patent and Trade Secret Licensing 1699Jasmine Geerinckx and Nathalie Tack Glossary 1713 Index 1731
£352.75
V&R unipress GmbH VergleichendesSehenindenKonfessionenderFrühenNeuze
Book Synopsis
£59.69
Set Margins' publications PostDigital Print
Book Synopsis
£21.85