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- Acetate
-
A transparent sheet placed over originals or
artwork, allowing the designer to write instructions and\or
indicate a second color for placement.
- Acid-free Paper
- Paper made from pulp containing little or no
acid so it resists deterioration from age. Also called
alkaline paper, archival paper, neutral pH paper, permanent
paper and thesis paper.
- Acid Resist
- An acid-proof protective coating
applied to metal plates prior to etching.
- Additive Color
- color produced by light falling onto a
surface, as compared to subtractive color. The additive
primary colors are red, green and blue.
- A4 Paper
- ISO paper size 210 x 297mm used for
Letterhead.
- Against the Grain
- At right angles to the grain direction
of the paper being used, as compared to with the grain. Also
called across the grain and cross grain. See also Grain
Direction.
- Airbrush
- Pen-shaped tool that sprays a fine
mist of ink or paint to retouch photos and create
continuous-tone illustrations.
- Alteration
- Any change made by the customer after
copy or artwork has been given to the service bureau,
separator or printer. The change could be in copy,
specifications or both. Also called AA, author alteration
and customer alteration.
- Anodized Plate
- An offset printing plate having a
treated surface in order to reduce wear for extended use.
- Anti-offset Powder
- Fine powder lightly sprayed over the
printed surface of coated paper as sheets leave a press.
Also called dust, offset powder, powder and spray powder.
- Antique Paper
- Roughest finish offered on offset
paper.
- Aqueous Coating
- Coating in a water base and applied
like ink by a printing press to protect and enhance the
printing underneath.
- Artwork
- All original copy, including type,
photos and illustrations, intended for printing. Also called
art.
- Author's Alterations (AA's)
- At the proofing stage, changes that
the client requests to be made concerning original art
provided. AA's are considered an additional cost to the
client usually.
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- Back Up
- (1) To print on the second side of a
sheet already printed on one side. (2) To adjust an image on
one side of a sheet so that it aligns back-to-back with an
image on the other side.
- Base Art
- Copy pasted up on the mounting oard of
a mechanical, as compared to overlay art. Also called base
mechanical.
- Base Negative
- Negative made by photographing base
art.
- Basic Size
- The standard size of sheets of paper
used to calculate basis weight in the United States and
Canada.
- Basis Weight
- In the United States and Canada, the
weight, in pounds, of a ream (500 sheets) of paper cut to
the basic size. Also called ream weight and substance weight
(sub weight). In countries using ISO paper sizes, the
weight, in grams, of one square meter of paper. Also called
grammage and ream weight.
- Bind
- Usually in the book arena, but not
exclusively, the joining of leafs or signatures together
with either wire, glue or other means.
- Bindery
- Usually a department within a printing
company responsible for collating, folding and trimming
various printing projects.
- Blank
- Category of paperboard ranging in
thickness from 15 to 48 points.
- Blanket
- Rubber-coated pad, mounted on a
cylinder of an offset press, that receives the inked image
from the plate and transfers it to the surface to be
printed.
- Bleed
- Printing that extends to the edge of a
sheet or page after trimming.
- Blind Folio
- A page number not printed on the page.
(In the book arena, a blank page traditionally does not
print a page number.)
- Blind Image
- Image debossed, embossed or stamped,
but not printed with ink or foil.
- Blocking
- Sticking together of printed sheets
causing damage when the surfaces are separated.
- Blow-Up
- An enlargement, usually used with
graphic images or photographs
- Blueline
- Prepress photographic proof made from
stripped negatives where all colors show as blue images on
white paper. Because 'blueline' is a generic term for proofs
made from a variety of materials having identical purposes
and similar appearances, it may also be called a blackprint,
blue, blueprint, brownline, brownprint, diazo, dyeline,
ozalid, position proof, silverprint, Dylux and VanDyke.
- Blurb
- A description or commentary of an
author or book content positioned on the book jacket.
- Board Paper
- General term for paper over 110#
index, 80# cover or 200 gsm that is commonly used for
products such as file folders, displays and post cards. Also
called paperboard.
- Body
- The main text of work not including
the headlines.
- Boiler Plate
- Blocks of repetitive type used and
copied over and over again.
- Bond paper
- Category of paper commonly used for
writing, printing and photocopying. Also called business
paper, communication paper, correspondence paper and writing
paper.
- Book Block
- Folded signatures gathered, sewn and
trimmed, but not yet covered.
- Book Paper
- Category of paper suitable for books,
magazines, catalogs, advertising and general printing needs.
Book paper is divided into uncoated paper (also called
offset paper), coated paper (also called art paper, enamel
paper, gloss paper and slick paper) and text paper.
- Border
- The decorative design or rule
surrounding matter on a page.
- Bounce
- (1) a repeating registration problem
in the printing stage of production. (2) Customer unhappy
with the results of a printing project and refuses to accept
the project.
- Bristol Paper
- General term referring to paper 6
points or thicker with basis weight between 90# and 200#
(200-500 gsm). Used for products such as index cards, file
folders and displays.
- Broadside
- The term used to indicate work printed
on one of a large sheet of paper.
- Bromide
- A photographic print created on
bromide paper.
- Broken Carton
- Carton of paper from which some of the
sheets have been sold. Also called less carton.
- Bronzing
- The effect produced by dusting wet ink
after printing and using a metallic powder.
- Build a Color
- To overlap two or more screen tints to
create a new color. Such an overlap is called a build, color
build, stacked screen build or tint build.
- Bulk
- Thickness of paper relative to its
basic weight.
- Bullet
- A dot or similar marking to emphasize
text.
- Burst Perfect Bind
- To bind by forcing glue into notches
along the spines of gathered signatures before affixing a
paper cover. Also called burst bind, notch bind and slotted
bind.
- Butt Register
- Register where ink colors meet
precisely without overlapping or allowing space between, as
compared to lap register. Also called butt fit and kiss
register.
- Buy Out
- To subcontract for a service that is
closely related to the business of the organization. Also
called farm out. Work that is bought out or farmed out is
sometimes called outwork or referred to as being out of
house.
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- C1S and C2S
- Abbreviations for coated one side and
coated two sides.
- Calender
- To make the surface of paper smooth by
pressing it between rollers during manufacturing.
- Caliper
- (1) Thickness of paper or other
substrate expressed in thousandths of an inch (mils or
points), pages per inch (ppi), thousandths of a millimeter
(microns) or pages per centimeter (ppc). (2) Device on a
sheetfed press that detects double sheets or on a binding
machine that detects missing signatures or inserts.
- Camera-ready Copy
- Mechanicals, photographs and art fully
prepared for reproduction according to the technical
requirements of the printing process being used. Also called
finished art and reproduction copy.
- Camera Service
- Business using a process camera to
make photostats, halftones, plates and other elements for
printing. Also called prep service and trade camera service.
- Carbonless Paper
- Paper coated with chemicals that
enable transfer of images from one sheet to another with
pressure from writing or typing.
- Carload
- Selling unit of paper that may weigh
anywhere from 20,000 to 100,000 pounds (9,090 to 45, 454
kilos), depending on which mill or merchant uses the term.
Abbreviated CL.
- Carton
- Selling unit of paper weighing
approximately 150 pounds (60 kilos). A carton can contain
anywhere from 500 to 5,000 sheets, depending on the size of
sheets and their basis weight.
- Case
- Covers and spine that, as a unit,
enclose the pages of a casebound book.
- Case Bind
- To bind using glue to hold signatures
to a case made of binder board covered with fabric, plastic
or leather. Also called cloth bind, edition bind, hard bind
and hard cover.
- Cast-coated Paper
- High gloss, coated paper made by
pressing the paper against a polished, hot, metal drum while
the coating is still wet.
- Catalog Paper
- Coated paper rated #4 or #5 with basis
weight from 35# to 50# (50 to 75 gsm) commonly used for
catalogs and magazines.
- Chain Dot
- (1) Alternate term for elliptical dot,
so called because midtone dots touch at two points, so look
like links in a chain. (2) Generic term for any midtone dots
whose corners touch.
- Chain Lines
- (1) Widely spaced lines in laid paper.
(2) Blemishes on printed images caused by tracking.
- Chalking
- Deterioration of a printed image
caused by ink that absorbs into paper too fast or has long
exposure to sun, and wind making printed images look dusty.
Also called crocking.
- Check Copy
- (1) Production copy of a publication
verified by the customer as printed, finished and bound
correctly. (2) One set of gathered book signatures approved
by the customer as ready for binding.
- Choke
- Technique of slightly reducing the
size of an image to create a hairline trap or to outline.
Also called shrink and skinny.
- Chrome
- Strength of a color as compared to how
close it seems to neutral gray. Also called depth,
intensity, purity and saturation.
- Close Up
- A mark used to indicate closing space
between characters or words. Usually used in proofing
stages.
- CMYK
- Abbreviation for cyan, magenta, yellow
and key (black), the four process colors.
- Coarse Screen
- Halftone screen with ruling of 65, 85
or 100 lines per inch (26, 34 or 40 lines centimeter).
- Coated Paper
- Paper with a coating of clay and other
substances that improves reflectivity and ink holdout. Mills
produce coated paper in the four major categories cast,
gloss, dull and matte.
- Collate
- To organize printed matter in a
specific order as requested.
- Collating Marks
- Mostly in the book arena, specific
marks on the back of signatures indicating exact position in
the collating stage.
- Color Balance
- Refers to amounts of process colors
that simulate the colors of the original scene or
photograph.
- Color Blanks
- Press sheets printed with photos or
illustrations, but without type. Also called shells.
- Color Break
- In multicolor printing, the point,
line or space at which one ink color stops and another
begins. Also called break for color.
- Color Cast
- Unwanted color affecting an entire
image or portion of an image.
- Color Control Bar
- Strip of small blocks of color on a
proof or press sheet to help evaluate features such as
density and dot gain. Also called color bar, color guide and
standard offset color bar.
- Color Correct
- To adjust the relationship among the
process colors to achieve desirable colors.
- Color Curves
- Instructions in computer software that
allow users to change or correct colors. Also called HLS and
HVS tables.
- Color Electronic Prepress System
- Computer, scanner, printer and other
hardware and software designed for image assembly, color
correction, retouching and output onto proofing materials,
film or printing plates. Abbreviated CEPS.
- Color Gamut
- The entire range of hues possible to
reproduce using a specific device, such as a computer
screen, or system, such as four-color process printing.
- Color Key
- Brand name for an overlay color proof.
Sometimes used as a generic term for any overlay color
proof.
- Color Model
- Way of categorizing and describing the
infinite array of colors found in nature.
- Color Separation
- (1) Technique of using a camera,
scanner or computer to divide continuous-tone color images
into four halftone negatives. (2) The product resulting from
color separating and subsequent four-color process printing.
Also called separation.
- Color Sequence
- Order in which inks are printed. Also
called laydown sequence and rotation.
- Color Shift
- Change in image color resulting from
changes in register, ink densities or dot gain during
four-color process printing.
- Color Transparency
- Film (transparent) used as art to
perform color separations.
- Comb Bind
- To bind by inserting the teeth of a
flexible plastic comb through holes punched along the edge
of a stack of paper. Also called plastic bind and GBC bind
(a brand name).
- Commercial Printer
- Printer producing a wide range of
products such as announcements, brochures, posters,
booklets, stationery, business forms, books and magazines.
Also called job printer because each job is different.
- Complementary Flat(s)
- The second or additional flat(s) used
when making composite film or for two or more burns on one
printing plate.
- Composite Art
- Mechanical on which copy for
reproduction in all colors appears on only one surface, not
separated onto overlays. Composite art has a tissue overlay
with instructions that indicate color breaks.
- Composite Film
- Film made by combining images from two
or more pieces of working film onto one film for making one
plate.
- Composite Proof
- Proof of color separations in position
with graphics and type. Also called final proof, imposition
proof and stripping proof.
- Composition
- (1) In typography, the assembly of
typographic elements, such as words and paragraphs, into
pages ready for printing. (2) In graphic design, the
arrangement of type, graphics and other elements on the
page.
- Comprehensive Dummy
- Simulation of a printed piece complete
with type, graphics and colors. Also called color
comprehensive and comp.
- Condition
- To keep paper in the pressroom for a
few hours or days before printing so that its moisture level
and temperature equal that in the pressroom. Also called
cure, mature and season.
- Contact Platemaker
- Device with lights, timing mechanism
and vacuum frame used to make contact prints, duplicate
film, proofs and plates. Also called platemaker and vacuum
frame.
- Continuous-tone Copy
- All photographs and those
illustrations having a range of shades not made up of dots,
as compared to line copy or halftones. Abbreviated contone.
- Contrast
- The degree of tones in an image
ranging from highlight to shadow.
- Converter
- Business that makes products such as
boxes, bags, envelopes and displays.
- Copyboard
- Surface or frame on a process camera
that holds copy in position to be photographed.
- Cover
- Thick paper that protects a
publication and advertises its title. Parts of covers are
often described as follows: Cover 1=outside front; Cover
2=inside front; Cover 3=inside back, Cover 4=outside back.
- Coverage
- Extent to which ink covers the surface
of a substrate. Ink coverage is usually expressed as light,
medium or heavy.
- Cover Paper
- Category of thick paper used for
products such as posters, menus, folders and covers of
paperback books.
- Crash
- Coarse cloth embedded in the glue
along the spine of a book to increase strength of binding.
Also called gauze, mull and scrim.
- Creep
- Phenomenon of middle pages of a folded
signature extending slightly beyond outside pages. Also
called feathering, outpush, push out and thrust. See also
Shingling.
- Crop Marks
- Lines near the edges of an image
indicating portions to be reproduced. Also called cut marks
and tic marks.
- Crossover
- Type or art that continues from one
page of a book or magazine across the gutter to the opposite
page. Also called bridge, gutter bleed and gutter jump.
- Cure
- To dry inks, varnishes or other
coatings after printing to ensure good adhesion and prevent
setoff.
- Customer Service Representative
- Employee of a printer, service bureau,
separator or other business who coordinates projects and
keeps customers informed. Abbreviated CSR.
- Cutoff
- Circumference of the impression
cylinder of a web press, therefore also the length of the
printed sheet that the press cuts from the roll of paper.
- Cut Sizes
- Paper sizes used with office machines
and small presses.
- Cutting Machine
- A machine that cuts stacks of paper to
desired sizes. The machine can also be used in scoring or
creasing.
- Cutting Die
- Usually a custom ordered item to trim
specific and unusual sized printing projects.
- CWT
- Abbreviation for hundredweight using
the Roman numeral C=100.
- Cyan
- One of the four process colors. Also
known as process blue.
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- Data Compression
- Technique of reducing the amount of
storage required to hold a digital file to reduce the disk
space the file requires and allow it to be processed or
transmitted more quickly.
- Deboss
- To press an image into paper so it
lies below the surface. Also called tool.
- Deckle Edge
- Edge of paper left ragged as it comes
from the papermaking machine instead of being cleanly cut.
Also called feather edge.
- Densitometer
- Instrument used to measure density.
Reflection densitometers measure light reflected from paper
and other surfaces; transmission densitometers measure light
transmitted through film and other materials.
- Density
- (1) Regarding ink, the relative
thickness of a layer of printed ink. (2) Regarding color,
the relative ability of a color to absorb light reflected
from it or block light passing through it. (3) Regarding
paper, the relative tightness or looseness of fibers.
- Density Range
- Difference between the darkest and
lightest areas of copy. Also called contrast ratio, copy
range and tonal range.
- Desktop Publishing
- Technique of using a personal computer
to design images and pages, and assemble type and graphics,
then using a laser printer or imagesetter to output the
assembled pages onto paper, film or printing plate.
Abbreviated DTP.
- Device Independent Colors
- Hues identified by wavelength or by
their place in systems such as developed by CIE. 'Device
independent' means a color can be described and specified
without regard to whether it is reproduced using ink,
projected light, photographic chemistry or any other method.
- Die
- Device for cutting, scoring, stamping,
embossing and debossing.
- Die Cut
- To cut irregular shapes in paper or
paperboard using a die.
- Digital Proofing
- Page proofs produced through
electronic memory transferred onto paper via laser or
ink-jet.
- Diffusion Transfer
- Chemical process of reproducing line
copy and making halftone positives ready for paste-up.
- Digital Dot
- Dot created by a computer and printed
out by a laser printer or imagesetter. Digital dots are
uniform in size, as compared to halftone dots that vary in
size.
- Direct Digital Color Proof
- Color proof made by a laser, ink jet
printer or other computer-controlled device without needing
to make separation films first. Abbreviated DDCP.
- Dog Ear
- A letter fold at the side of one of
the creases, an indentation occurs.
- Dot Gain
- Phenomenon of halftone dots printing
larger on paper than they are on films or plates, reducing
detail and lowering contrast. Also called dot growth, dot
spread and press gain.
- Dot Size
- Relative size of halftone dots as
compared to dots of the screen ruling being used. There is
no unit of measurement to express dot size. Dots are too
large, too small or correct only in comparison to what the
viewer finds attractive.
- Dots-per-inch
- Measure of resolution of input devices
such as scanners, display devices such as monitors, and
output devices such as laser printers, imagesetters and
monitors. Abbreviated DPI. Also called dot pitch.
- Double Black Duotone
- Duotone printed from two halftones,
one shot for highlights and the other shot for midtones and
shadows.
- Double Bump
- To print a single image twice so it
has two layers of ink.
- Double Burn
- To expose film or a plate twice to
different negatives and thus create a composite image.
- Double Density
- A method of recording electronically
(disk, CD, floppy) using a modified frequency to allow more
data storage.
- Double Dot Halftone
- Halftone double burned onto one plate
from two halftones, one shot for shadows, the second shot
for midtones and highlights.
- Doubling
- Printing defect appearing as blurring
or shadowing of the image. Doubling may be caused by
problems with paper, cylinder alignment, blanket pressures
or dirty cylinders.
- DPI
- Considered as "dots per square inch,"
a measure of output resolution in relationship to printers,
imagesetters and monitors.
- Drawdown
- Sample of inks specified for a job
applied to the substrate specified for a job. Also called
pulldown.
- Drill
- In the printing arena, to drill a
whole in a printed matter.
- Dropout
- Halftone dots or fine lines eliminated
from highlights by overexposure during camera work.
- Dropout Halftone
- Halftone in which contrast has been
increased by eliminating dots from highlights.
- Dry Back
- Phenomenon of printed ink colors
becoming less dense as the ink dries.
- Dry Offset
- Using metal plates in the printing
process, which are etched to .15mm (.0006 in) creating a
right reading plate, printed on the offset blanket
transferring to paper without the use of water.
- Dry Trap
- To print over dry ink, as compared to
wet trap.
- Dual-purpose Bond Paper
- Bond paper suitable for printing by
either lithography (offset) or xerography (photocopy).
Abbreviated DP bond paper.
- Dull Finish
- Flat (not glossy) finish on coated
paper; slightly smoother than matte. Also called suede
finish, velour finish and velvet finish.
- Dummy
- Simulation of the final product. Also
called mockup.
- Duotone
- Black-and-white photograph reproduced
using two halftone negatives, each shot to emphasize
different tonal values in the original.
- Duplex Paper
- Thick paper made by pasting highlights
together two thinner sheets, usually of different colors.
Also called double-faced paper and two-tone paper.
- Duplicator
- Offset press made for quick printing.
- Dylux
- Brand name for photographic paper used
to make blue line proofs. Often used as alternate term for
blueline.
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- Electronic Front End (Electronic
Composition)
- General term referring to a prepress
system based on computers.
- Electronic Image Assembly
- Assembly of a composite image from
portions of other images and/or other page elements using a
computer.
- Electronic Mechanical
- Mechanical exclusively in electronic
files.
- Electronic Publishing
- (1) Publishing by printing with
device, such as a photocopy machine or ink jet printer,
driven by a computer that can change the image instantly
from one copy to the next. (2) Publishing via output on fax,
computer bulletin board or other electronic medium, as
compared to output on paper.
- Emboss
- To press an image into paper so it
lies above the surface. Also called cameo and tool.
- Emulsion
- Casting of light-sensitive chemicals
on papers, films, printing plates and stencils.
- Emulsion Down/Emulsion Up
- Film whose emulsion side faces down
(away from the viewer) or up (toward the viewer) when ready
to make a plate or stencil. Abbreviated ED, EU. Also called
E up/down and face down/face up.
- Encapsulated PostScript file
- Computer file containing both images
and PostScript commands. Abbreviated EPS file.
- End Sheet
- Sheet that attaches the inside pages
of a case bound book to its cover. Also called pastedown or
end papers.
- English Finish
- Smooth finish on uncoated book paper;
smoother than eggshell, rougher than smooth.
- Engraving
- Printing method using a plate, also
called a die, with an image cut into its surface.
- EP
- Abbreviation for envelope.
- EPS
- Encapsulated Post Script, a known file
format usually used to transfer post script information from
one program to another.
- Equivalent Paper
- Paper that is not the brand specified,
but looks, prints and may cost the same. . Also called
comparable stock.
- Estimate
- Price that states what a job will
probably cost. Also called bid, quotation and tender.
- Estimator
- The individual performing or creating
the "estimate."
- Etch
- To use chemicals to carve an image
into metal, glass or film.
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- Face
- Edge of a bound publication opposite
the spine. Also called foredge. Also, an abbreviation for
typeface referring to a family of a general style.
- Fake Duotone
- Halftone in one ink color printed over
screen tint of a second ink color. Also called dummy
duotone, dougraph, duplex halftone, false duotone, flat tint
halftone and halftone with screen.
- Fast Color Inks
- Inks with colors that retain their
density and resist fading as the product is used and washed.
- Feeding Unit
- Component of a printing press that
moves paper into the register unit.
- Felt Finish
- Soft woven pattern in text paper.
- Felt Side
- Side of the paper that was not in
contact with the Fourdrinier wire during papermaking, as
compared to wire side.
- Fifth Color
- Ink color used in addition to the four
needed by four-color process.
- Film Gauge
- Thickness of film. The most common
gauge for graphic arts film is 0.004 inch (0.1 mm).
- Film Laminate
- Thin sheet of plastic bonded to a
printed product for protection or increased gloss.
- Fine Papers
- Papers made specifically for writing
or commercial printing, as compared to coarse papers and
industrial papers. Also called cultural papers and graphic
papers.
- Fine Screen
- Screen with ruling of 150 lines per
inch (80 lines per centimeter) or more.
- Finish
- (1) Surface characteristics of paper.
(2) General term for trimming, folding, binding and all
other post press operations.
- Finished Size
- Size of product after production is
completed, as compared to flat size. Also called trimmed
size.
- Fit
- Refers to ability of film to be
registered during stripping and assembly. Good fit means
that all images register to other film for the same job.
- Fixed Costs
- Costs that remain the same regardless
of how many pieces are printed. Copyrighting, photography
and design are fixed costs.
- Flat Color
- (1) Any color created by printing only
one ink, as compared to a color created by printing
four-color process. Also called block color and spot color.
(2) color that seems weak or lifeless.
- Flat Plan (Flats)
- Diagram of the flats for a publication
showing imposition and indicating colors.
- Flat Size
- Size of product after printing and
trimming, but before folding, as compared to finished size.
- Flexography
- Method of printing on a web press
using rubber or plastic plates with raised images. Also
called aniline printing because flexographic inks originally
used aniline dyes. Abbreviated flexo.
- Flood
- To print a sheet completely with an
ink or varnish. flooding with ink is also called painting
the sheet.
- Flush Cover
- Cover trimmed to the same size as
inside pages, as compared to overhang cover. Also called cut
flush
- Flyleaf
- Leaf, at the front and back of a
casebound book that is the one side of the end paper not
glued to the case.
- Fogging Back
- Used in making type more legible by
lowering density of an image, while allowing the image to
show through.
- Foil Emboss
- To foil stamp and emboss an image.
Also called heat stamp.
- Foil Stamp
- Method of printing that releases foil
from its backing when stamped with the heated die. Also
called block print, hot foil stamp and stamp.
- Folder
- A bindery machine dedicated to folding
printed materials.
- Fold Marks
- With printed matter, markings
indicating where a fold is to occur, usually located at the
top edges.
- Foldout
- Gatefold sheet bound into a
publication, often used for a map or chart. Also called
gatefold and pullout.
- Folio (page number)
- The actual page number in a
publication.
- Form
- Each side of a signature. Also spelled
forme.
- Format
- Size, style, shape, layout or
organization of a layout or printed product.
- Form bond
- Lightweight bond, easy to perforate,
made for business forms. Also called register bond.
- Form Roller(s)
- Roller(s) that come in contact with
the printing plate, bringing it ink or water.
- For Position Only
- Refers to inexpensive copies of photos
or art used on mechanical to indicate placement and scaling,
but not intended for reproduction. Abbreviated FPO.
- Forwarding
- In the case book arena, the binding
process which involves folding, rounding, backing,
headbanding and reinforcing.
- Fountain
- Trough or container, on a printing
press, that holds fluids such as ink, varnish or water. Also
called duct.
- Fountain Solution
- Mixture of water and chemicals that
dampens a printing plate to prevent ink from adhering to the
nonimage area. Also called dampener solution.
- Four-color Process Printing
- Technique of printing that uses black,
magenta, cyan and yellow to simulate full-color images. Also
called color process printing, full color printing and
process printing.
- Free Sheet
- Paper made from cooked wood fibers
mixed with chemicals and washed free of impurities, as
compared to groundwood paper. Also called woodfree paper.
- French Fold
- A printed sheet, printed one side
only, folded with two right angle folds to form a four page
uncut section.
- Full-range Halftone
- Halftone ranging from 0 percent
coverage in its highlights to 100 percent coverage in its
shadows.
- Full-scale Black
- Black separation made to have dots
throughout the entire tonal range of the image, as compared
to half-scale black and skeleton black. Also called
full-range black.
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- Galley Proof
- Proof of type from any Source, whether
metal type or photo type. Also called checker and slip
proof.
- Gang
- (1) To halftone or separate more than
one image in only one exposure. (2) To reproduce two or more
different printed products simultaneously on one sheet of
paper during one press run. Also called combination run.
- Gate Fold
- A sheet that folds where both sides
fold toward the gutter in overlapping layers.
- Gathered
- Signatures assembled next to each
other in the proper sequence for binding, as compared to
nested. Also called stacked.
- Ghost Halftone
- Normal halftone whose density has been
reduced to produce a very faint image.
- Ghosting
- (1) Phenomenon of a faint image
appearing on a printed sheet where it was not intended to
appear. Chemical ghosting refers to the transfer of the
faint image from the front of one sheet to the back of
another sheet. Mechanical ghosting refers to the faint image
appearing as a repeat of an image on the same side of the
sheet. (2) Phenomenon of printed image appearing too light
because of ink starvation.
- Gilding
- Mostly in the book arena, gold leafing
the edges of a book.
- Gloss
- Consider the light reflecting on
various objects in the printing industry (e.g., paper, ink,
laminates, UV coating, varnish).
- Gloss Ink
- Ink used and printed on coated stock
(mostly litho and letterpress) such as the ink will dry
without penetration.
- Grade
- General term used to distinguish
between or among printing papers, but whose specific meaning
depends on context. Grade can refer to the category, class,
rating, finish or brand of paper.
- Graduated Screen Tint
- Screen tint that changes densities
gradually and smoothly, not in distinct steps. Also called
degrade, gradient, ramped screen and vignette.
- Grain Direction
- Predominant direction in which fibers
in paper become aligned during manufacturing. Also called
machine direction.
- Grain Long Paper
- Paper whose fibers run parallel to the
long dimension of the sheet. Also called long grain paper
and narrow web paper.
- Grain Short Paper
- Paper whose fibers run parallel to the
short dimension of the sheet. Also called short grain paper
and wide web paper.
- Grammage
- Basis weight of paper in grams per
square meter (gsm).
- Graphic Arts
- The crafts, industries and professions
related to designing and printing on paper and other
substrates.
- Graphic Arts Film
- Film whose emulsion yields high
contrast images suitable for reproduction by a printing
press, as compared to continuous-tone film. Also called
litho film and repro film.
- Graphic Design
- Arrangement of type and visual
elements along with specifications for paper, ink colors and
printing processes that, when combined, convey a visual
message.
- Graphics
- Visual elements that supplement type
to make printed messages more clear or interesting.
- Gravure
- Method of printing using metal
cylinders etched with millions of tiny wells that hold ink.
- Gray Balance
- Printed cyan, magenta and yellow
halftone dots that accurately, reproduce a neutral gray
image.
- Gray Component Replacement
- Technique of replacing gray tones in
the yellow, cyan and magenta films, made while color
separating, with black ink. Abbreviated GCR. Also called
achromatic color removal.
- Gray Levels
- Number of distinct gray tones that can
be reproduced by a computer.
- Gray Scale
- Strip of gray values ranging from
white to black. Used by process camera and scanner operators
to calibrate exposure times for film and plates. Also called
step wedge.
- Grind Edge
- Alternate term for binding edge when
referring to perfect bound products.
- Grindoff
- Approximately 1/8 inch (3 mm) along
the spine that is ground off gathered signatures before
perfect binding.
- Gripper Edge
- Edge of a sheet held by grippers on a
sheetfed press, thus going first through the press. Also
called feeding edge and leading edge.
- Groundwood Paper
- Newsprint and other inexpensive paper
made from pulp created when wood chips are ground
mechanically rather than refined chemically.
- GSM
- The unit of measurement for paper
weight (grams per square meter).
- Gutter
- In the book arena, the inside margins
toward the back or the binding edges.
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- Hairline (Rule)
- Subjective term referring to very
small space, thin line or close register. The meaning
depends on who is using the term and in what circumstances.
- Half-scale Black
- Black separation made to have dots
only in the shadows and midtones, as compared to full-scale
black and skeleton black.
- Halftone
- (1) To photograph or scan a continuous
tone image to convert the image into halftone dots. (2) A
photograph or continuous-tone illustration that has been
halftoned and appears on film, paper, printing plate or the
final printed product.
- Halftone Screen
- Piece of film or glass containing a
grid of lines that breaks light into dots. Also called
contact screen and screen.
- Halo Effect
- Faint shadow sometimes surrounding
halftone dots printed. Also called halation. The halo itself
is also called a fringe.
- Hard Dots
- Halftone dots with no halos or soft
edges, as compared to soft dots.
- Hard Mechanical
- Mechanical consisting of paper and/or
acetate and made using paste-up techniques, as compared to
electronic mechanical.
- Head(er)
- At the top of a page, the margin.
- Head-to-tail
- Imposition with heads (tops) of pages
facing tails (bottoms) of other pages.
- Heat-set Web
- Web press equipped with an oven to dry
ink, thus able to print coated paper.
- Hickey
- Spot or imperfection in printing, most
visible in areas of heavy ink coverage, caused by dirt on
the plate or blanket. Also called bulls eye and fish eye.
- High-fidelity Color
- Color reproduced using six, eight or
twelve separations, as compared to four-color process.
- High-key Photo
- Photo whose most important details
appear in the highlights.
- Highlights
- Lightest portions of a photograph or
halftone, as compared to midtones and shadows.
- Hinged Cover
- Perfect bound cover scored 1/8 inch
(3mm) from the spine so it folds at the hinge instead of,
along the edge of the spine.
- HLS
- Abbreviation for hue, lightness,
saturation, one of the color-control options often found in
software, for design and page assembly. Also called HVS.
- Hot Spot
- Printing defect caused when a piece of
dirt or an air bubble caused incomplete draw-down during
contact platemaking, leaving an area of weak ink coverage or
visible dot gain.
- House Sheet
- Paper kept in stock by a printer and
suitable for a variety of printing jobs. Also called floor
sheet.
- Hue
- A specific color such as yellow or
green.
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- Image Area
- The actual area on the printed matter
that is not restricted to ink coverage,
- Imagesetter
- Laser output device using
photosensitive paper or film.
- Imposition
- Arrangement of pages on mechanicals or
flats so they will appear in proper sequence after press
sheets are folded and bound.
- Impression
- (1) Referring to an ink color, one
impression equals one press sheet passing once through a
printing unit. (2) Referring to speed of a press, one
impression equals one press sheet passing once through the
press.
- Impression Cylinder
- Cylinder, on a press, that pushes
paper against the plate or blanket, thus forming the image.
Also called impression roller.
- Imprint
- To print new copy on a previously
printed sheet, such as imprinting an employee's name on
business cards. Also called surprint.
- Ink Balance
- Relationship of the densities and dot
gains of process inks to each other and to a standard
density of neutral gray
- Ink Fountain
- Reservoir, on a printing press, that
holds ink.
- Ink Holdout
- Characteristic of paper that prevents
it from absorbing ink, thus allowing ink to dry on the
surface of the paper. Also called holdout.
- Ink Jet Printing
- Method of printing by spraying
droplets of ink through computer-controlled nozzles. Also
called jet printing.
- Inner Form
- Form (side of the press sheet) whose
images all appear inside the folded signature, as compared
to outer form.
- In-Plant Printer
- Department of an agency, business or
association that does printing for a parent organization.
Also called captive printer and in-house printer.
- Inserts
- Within a publication, an additional
item positioned into the publication loose (not bound in).
- Intaglio Printing
- Printing method whose image carriers
are surfaces with two levels, having inked areas lower than
noninked areas. Gravure and engraving are the most common
forms of intaglio. Also called recess printing.
- Integral Proof
- Color proof of separations shown on
one piece of proofing paper, as compared to an overlay
proof. Also called composition proof, laminate proof,
plastic proof and single-sheet proof.
- Interleaves
- Printed pages loosely inserted in a
publication.
- ISBN
- A number assigned to a published work
and usually found either on the title page or the back of
the title page. Considered an International Standard Book
Number.
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- Job Lot Paper
- Paper that didn't meet specifications
when produced, has been discontinued, or for other reasons
is no longer considered first quality.
- Job Number
- A number assigned to a specific
printing project in a printing company for use in tracking
and historical record keeping.
- Job Ticket
- Form used by service bureaus,
separators and printers to specify production schedule of a
job and the materials it needs. Also called docket,
production order and work order.
- Jogger
- A vibration machine with a slopping
platform to even-up stacks of printed materials.
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- K
- Abbreviation for black in four-color
process printing. Hence the 'K' in CMYK.
- Key
- (1) The screw that controls ink flow
from the ink fountain of a printing press. (2) To relate
loose pieces of copy to their positions on a layout or
mechanical using a system of numbers or letters. (3)
Alternate term for the color black, as in 'key plate.'
- Keylines
- Lines on a mechanical or negative
showing the exact size, shape and location of photographs or
other graphic elements. Also called holding lines.
- Key Negative or Plate
- Negative or plate that prints the most
detail, thus whose image guides the register of images from
other plates. Also called key printer.
- Kiss Die Cut
- To die cut the top layer, but not the
backing layer, of self-adhesive paper. Also called face cut.
- Kiss Impression
- Lightest possible impression that will
transfer ink to a Substrate.
- Kraft Paper
- Strong paper used for wrapping and to
make grocery bags and large envelopes.
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- Laid Finish
- Finish on bond or text paper on which
grids of parallel lines simulate the surface of handmade
paper. Laid lines are close together and run against the
grain; chain lines are farther apart and run with the grain.
- Laminate
- A thin transparent plastic sheet
(coating) applied to usually a thick stock (covers, post
cards, etc.) providing protection against liquid and heavy
use, and usually accents existing color, providing a glossy
(or lens) effect.
- Landscape
- Artist style in which width is greater
than height. (Portrait is opposite.)
- Lap Register
- Register where ink colors overlap
slightly, as compared to butt register.
- Laser Bond
- Bond paper made especially smooth and
dry to run well through laser printers.
- Laser-imprintable Ink
- Ink that will not fade or blister as
the paper on which it is printed is used in a laser printer.
- Lay Flat Bind
- Method of perfect binding that allows
a publication to lie fully open. (Also known as Lay Flat
Perfect Binding.)
- Lay Edge
- The edge of a sheet of paper feeding
into a press.
- Layout
- A sample of the original providing
(showing) position of printed work (direction, instructions)
needed and desired.
- Leading
- Amount of space between lines of type.
- Leaf
- One sheet of paper in a publication.
Each side of a leaf is one page.
- Ledger Paper
- Strong, smooth bond paper used for
keeping business records. Also called record paper.
- Letter fold
- Two folds creating three panels that
allow a sheet of letterhead to fit a business envelope. Also
called barrel fold and wrap around fold.
- Letter Paper
- In North America, 8 1/2' x 11' sheets.
In Europe, A4 sheets.
- Legend
- Directions about a specific matter
(illustrations) and how to use. In regard to maps and
tables, an explanation of signs (symbols) used.
- Letterpress
- Method of printing from raised
surfaces, either metal type or plates whose surfaces have
been etched away from image areas. Also called block
printing.
- Lightweight Paper
- Book paper with basis weight less than
40# (60 gsm).
- Lignin
- Substance in trees that holds
cellulose fibers together. Free sheet has most lignin
removed; groundwood paper contains lignin.
- Line Copy
- Any high-contrast image, including
type, as compared to continuous-tone copy. Also called line
art and line work.
- Line Negative
- Negative made from line copy.
- Linen Finish
- Embossed finish on text paper that
simulates the pattern of linen cloth.
- Lithography
- Method of printing using plates whose
image areas attract ink and whose nonimage areas repel ink.
Nonimage areas may be coated with water to repel the oily
ink or may have a surface, such as silicon, that repels ink.
- Live Area
- Area on a mechanical within which
images will print. Also called safe area.
- Logo (Logotype)
- A company, partnership or corporate
creation (design) that denotes a unique entity. A possible
combination of letters and art work to create a "sole"
entity symbol of that specific unit.
- Looseleaf
- Binding method allowing insertion and
removal of pages in a publication (e.g., trim-4-drill-3).
- Loose Proof
- Proof of a halftone or color
separation that is not assembled with other elements from a
page, as compared to composite proof. Also called first
proof, random proof, scatter proof and show-color proof.
- Loupe
- Lens built into a small stand. Used to
inspect copy, film, proofs, plates and printing. Also called
glass and linen tester.
- Low Key Photo
- Photo whose most important details
appear in the shadows.
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- Machine Glazed (MG)
- Paper holding a high-gloss finish only
on one side.
- Magenta
- One of the four process colors.
- Makeready
- (1) All activities required to prepare
a press or other machine to function for a specific printing
or bindery job, as compared to production run. Also called
setup. (2) Paper used in the makeready process at any stage
in production. Makeready paper is part of waste or spoilage.
- Making Order
- Order for paper that a mill makes to
the customer's specifications, as compared to a mill order
or stock order.
- Male Die
- Die that applies pressure during
embossing or debossing. Also called force card.
- Manuscript (MS)
- An author's original form of work
(hand written, typed or on disk) submitted for publication.
- Margin
- Imprinted space around the edge of the
printed material.
- Mark-Up
- Instructions written usually on a
"dummy."
- Mask
- To prevent light from reaching part of
an image, therefore isolating the remaining part. Also
called knock out.
- Master
- Paper or plastic plate used on a
duplicating press.
- Match Print
- A form of a four-color-process
proofing system.
- Matte Finish
- Flat (not glossy) finish on
photographic paper or coated printing paper.
- Mechanical
- Camera-ready assembly of type, graphic
and other copy complete with instructions to the printer. A
hard mechanical consists of paper and/or acetate, is made
using paste-up techniques, and may also be called an
artboard, board or paste-up. A soft mechanical, also called
an electronic mechanical, exists as a file of type and other
images assembled using a computer.
- Mechanical Bind
- To bind using a comb, coil, ring
binder, post or any other technique not requiring gluing,
sewing or stitching.
- Mechanical Separation
- Color breaks made on the mechanical
using a separate overlay for each color to be printed.
- Mechanical Tint
- Lines or patterns formed with dots
creating artwork for reproduction.
- Metallic Ink
- Ink containing powdered metal or
pigments that simulate metal.
- Metallic Paper
- Paper coated with a thin film of
plastic or pigment whose color and gloss simulate metal.
- Midtones
- In a photograph or illustration, tones
created by dots between 30 percent and 70 percent of
coverage, as compared to highlights and shadows.
- Mil 1/1000 Inch
- The thickness of plastic films as
printing substrates are expressed in mils.
- Misting
- Phenomenon of droplets of ink being
thrown off the roller train. Also called flying ink.
- Mock Up
- A reproduction of the original printed
matter and possibly containing instructions or direction.
- Modem
- Mostly used over phone lines, a device
that converts electronic stored information from point a. to
point b.
- Moire
- Undesirable pattern resulting when
halftones and screen tints are made with improperly aligned
screens, or when a pattern in a photo, such as a plaid,
interfaces with a halftone dot pattern.
- Monarch
- Paper size (7' x 10') and envelope
shape often used for personal stationery.
- Mottle
- Spotty, uneven ink absorption. Also
called sinkage. A mottled image may be called mealy.
- Mull
- A specific type of glue used for books
binding and personal pads needing strength.
- Multicolor Printing
- Printing in more than one ink color
(but not four-color process). Also called polychrome
printing.
- M Weight
- Weight of 1,000 sheets of paper in any
specific size.
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- Natural Color
- Very light brown color of paper. May
also be called antique, cream, ivory, off-white or mellow
white.
- Nested
- Signatures assembled inside one
another in the proper sequence for binding, as compared to
gathered. Also called inset.
- Neutral Gray
- Gray with no hue or cast.
- News Print
- Paper used in printing newspapers.
Considered low quality and "a short life use."
- Newton Ring
- Flaw in a photograph or halftone that
looks like a drop of oil or water.
- Nipping
- In the book binding process, a stage
where air is expelled from it's contents at the sewing
stage.
-
Nonheatset Web
- Web press without a drying oven, thus
not able to print on coated paper. Also called cold-set web
and open web.
- Nonimpact Printing
- Printing using lasers, ions, ink jets
or heat to transfer images to paper.
- Nonreproducing Blue
- Light blue that does not record on
graphic arts film, therefore may be used to preprint layout
grids and write instructions on mechanicals. Also called
blue pencil, drop-out blue, fade-out blue and nonrepro blue.
- Novelty Printing
- Printing on products such as coasters,
pencils, balloons, golf balls and ashtrays, known as
advertising specialties or premiums.
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- Offset Printing
- Printing technique that transfers ink
from a plate to a blanket to paper instead of directly from
plate to paper.
- Opacity
- (1) Characteristic of paper or other
substrate that prevents printing on one side from showing
through the other side. (2) Characteristic of ink that
prevents the substrate from showing through.
- Onion Skin
- A specific lightweight type (kind) of
paper usually used in the past for air mail. Seldom used
today (in the typewriter era).
- Opaque
- (1) Not transparent. (2) To cover
flaws in negative with tape or opaquing paint. Also called
block out and spot.
- Open Prepress Interface
- Hardware and software that link
desktop publishing systems with color electronic prepress
systems.
- Outer form
- Form (side of a press sheet)
containing images for the first and last pages of the folded
signature (its outside pages) as compared to inner form.
- Outline Halftone
- Halftone in which background has been
removed or replaced to isolate or silhouette the main image.
Also called knockout halftone and silhouette halftone.
- Overlay
- Layer of material taped to a
mechanical, photo or proof. Acetate overlays are used to
separate colors by having some type or art on them instead
of on the mounting board. Tissue overlays are used to carry
instructions about the underlying copy and to protect the
base art.
- Overlay Proof
- Color proof consisting of polyester
sheets laid on top of each other with their image in
register, as compared to integral proof. Each sheet
represents the image to be printed in one color. Also called
celluloid proof and layered proof.
- Overprint
- To print one image over a previously
printed image, such as printing type over a screen tint.
Also called surprint.
- Over Run
- Additional printed matter beyond
order. Overage policy varies in the printing industry.
Advance questions avoid blind knowledge.
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- Page
- One side of a leaf in a publication.
- Page Count
- Total number of pages that a
publication has. Also called extent.
- Page Proof
- Proof of type and graphics as they
will look on the finished page complete with elements such
as headings, rules and folios.
- Pagination
- In the book arena, the numbering of
pages.
- Painted Sheet
- Sheet printed with ink edge to edge,
as compared to spot color. The painted sheet refers to the
final product, not the press sheet, and means that 100
percent coverage results from bleeds off all four sides.
- Panel
- One page of a brochure, such as one
panel of a rack brochure. One panel is on one side of the
paper. A letter-folded sheet has six panels, not three.
- Paper Plate
- A printing plate made of strong and
durable paper in the short run offset arena (cost effective
with short runs).
- Parallel Fold
- Method of folding. Two parallel folds
to a sheet will produce 6 panels.
- Parent Sheet
- Any sheet larger than 11' x 17' or A3.
- Pasteboard
- Chipboard with another paper pasted to
it.
- Paste-up
- To paste copy to mounting boards and,
if necessary, to overlays so it is assembled into a
camera-ready mechanical. The mechanical produced is often
called a paste-up.
- PE
- Proofreader mark meaning printer error
and showing a mistake by a typesetter, prepress service or
printer as compared to an error by the customer.
- Perfect Bind
- To bind sheets that have been ground
at the spine and are held to the cover by glue. Also called
adhesive bind, cut-back bind, glue bind, paper bind, patent
bind, perfecting bind, soft bind and soft cover. See also
Burst Perfect Bind.
- Perfecting Press
- Press capable of printing both sides
of the paper during a single pass. Also called duplex press
and perfector.
- Perf Marks
- On a "dummy" marking where the
perforation is to occur.
- Perforating
- Taking place on a press or a binder
machine, creating a line of small dotted wholes for the
purpose of tearing-off a part of a printed matter (usually
straight lines, vertical or horizontal).
- Pica
- A unit of measure in the printing
industry. A pica is approximately 0.166 in. There are 12
points to a pica.
- Photoengraving
- Engraving done using photochemistry.
- Photomechanical Transfer
- Brand name for a diffusion transfer
process used to make positive paper prints of line copy and
halftones. Often used as alternate term for photostat.
Abbreviated PMT.
- Photostat
- Brand name for a diffusion transfer
process used to make positive paper prints of line copy and
halftones. Often used as alternate term for PMT.
- Picking
- Phenomenon of ink pulling bits of
coating or fiber away from the surface of paper as it
travels through the press, thus leaving unprinted spots in
the image area.
- Pickup Art
- Artwork, used in a previous job, to be
incorporated in a current job.
- Pinholing
- Small holes (unwanted) in printed
areas because of a variety of reasons.
- Pin Register
- Technique of registering separations,
flats and printing plates by using small holes, all of equal
diameter, at the edges of both flats and plates.
- Pixel
- Short for picture element, a dot made
by a computer, scanner or other digital device. Also called
pel.
- Planographic Printing
- Printing method whose image carriers
are level surfaces with inked areas separated from noninked
areas by chemical means. Planographic printing includes
lithography, offset lithography and spirit duplicating.
- Plate
- Piece of paper, metal, plastic or
rubber carrying an image to be reproduced using a printing
press.
- Platemaker
- (1) In quick printing, a process
camera that makes plates automatically from mechanicals. (2)
In commercial lithography, a machine with a vacuum frame
used to expose plates through film.
- Plate-ready Film
- Stripped negatives or positives fully
prepared for platemaking.
- Pleasing Color
- Color that the customer considers
satisfactory even though it may not precisely match original
samples, scenes or objects.
- PMS
- Obsolete reference to Pantone Matching
System. The correct trade name of the colors in the Pantone
Matching System is Pantone colors, not PMS Colors.
- PMT
- Abbreviation for photomechanical
transfer.
- Point
- (1) Regarding paper, a unit of
thickness equating 1/1000 inch. (2) Regarding type, a unit
of measure equaling 1/12 pica and .013875 inch (.351mm).
- Portrait
- An art design in which the height is
greater than the width. (Opposite of Landscape.)
- Position Stat
- Photocopy or PMT of a photo or
illustration made to size and affixed to a mechanical.
- Positive Film
- Film that prevents light from passing
through images, as compared to negative film that allows
light to pass through. Also called knockout film.
- Post Bind
- To bind using a screw and post
inserted through a hole in a pile of loose sheets.
- Prepress
- Camera work, color separations,
stripping, platemaking and other prepress functions
performed by the printer, separator or a service bureau
prior to printing. Also called preparation.
- Prepress Proof
- Any color proof made using ink jet,
toner, dyes or overlays, as compared to a press proof
printed using ink. Also called dry proof and off-press
proof.
- Preprint
- To print portions of sheets that will
be used for later imprinting.
- Press Check
- Event at which makeready sheets from
the press are examined before authorizing full production to
begin.
- Press Proof
- Proof made on press using the plates,
ink and paper specified for the job. Also called strike off
and trial proof.
- Press Time
- (1) Amount of time that one printing
job spends on press, including time required for makeready.
(2) Time of day at which a printing job goes on press.
- Price Break
- Quantity at which unit cost of paper
or printing drops.
- Printer Pairs
- Usually in the book arena, consecutive
pages as they appear on a flat or signature.
- Printer Spreads
- Mechanicals made so they are imposed
for printing, as compared to reader spreads.
- Printing
- Any process that transfers to paper or
another substrate an image from an original such as a film
negative or positive, electronic memory, stencil, die or
plate.
- Printing Plate
- Surface carrying an image to be
printed. Quick printing uses paper or plastic plates;
letterpress, engraving and commercial lithography use metal
plates; flexography uses rubber or soft plastic plates.
Gravure printing uses a cylinder. The screen printing is
also called a plate.
- Printing Unit
- Assembly of fountain, rollers and
cylinders that will print one ink color. Also called color
station, deck, ink station, printer, station and tower.
- Process Camera
- Camera used to photograph mechanicals
and other camera-ready copy. Also called copy, camera and
graphic arts camera. A small, simple process camera may be
called a stat camera.
- Process Color (Inks)
- The colors used for four-color process
printing: yellow, magenta, cyan and black.
- Production Run
- Press run intended to manufacture
products as specified, as compared to makeready.
- Proof
- Test sheet made to reveal errors or
flaws, predict results on press and record how a printing
job is intended to appear when finished.
- Proofreader Marks
- Standard symbols and abbreviations
used to mark up manuscripts and proofs. Also called
correction marks.
- Proportion Scale
- Round device used to calculate percent
that an original image must by reduced or enlarged to yield
a specific reproduction size. Also called percentage wheel,
proportion dial, proportion wheel and scaling wheel.
- Publishing Paper
- Paper made in weights, colors and
surfaces suited to books, magazines, catalogs and
free-standing inserts.
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- Quality
- Subjective term relating to
expectations by the customer, printer and other
professionals associated with a printing job and whether the
job meets those expectations.
- Quarto
- (1) Sheet folded twice, making pages
one-fourth the size of the original sheet. A quarto makes an
8-page signature. (2) Book made from quarto sheets,
traditionally measuring about 9' x 12'.
- Quick Printing
- Printing using small
sheetfed presses,
called duplicators, using cut sizes of bond and offset
paper.
- Quotation
- Price offered by a printer to produce
a specific job.
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- Rag Paper
- Stationery or other forms of stock
having a strong percentage content of "cotton rags."
- Rainbow Fountain
- Technique of putting ink colors next
to each other in the same ink fountain and oscillating the
ink rollers to make the colors merge where they touch,
producing a rainbow effect.
- Raster Image Processor
(RIP)
-
Device that translates page
description commands into bitmapped information for an
output device such as a laser printer or imagesetter.
- Reader Spread
- Mechanicals made in two page spreads
as readers would see the pages, as compared to printer
spread.
- Ream
- 500 sheets of paper.
- Recycled Paper
- New paper made entirely or in part
from old paper.
- Reflective Copy
- Products, such as fabrics,
illustrations and photographic prints, viewed by light
reflected from them, as compared to transparent copy. Also
called reflex copy.
- Register
- To place printing properly with regard
to the edges of paper and other printing on the same sheet.
Such printing is said to be in register.
- Register Marks
- Cross-hair lines on mechanicals and
film that help keep flats, plates, and printing in register.
Also called crossmarks and position marks.
- Relief Printing
- Printing method whose image carriers
are surfaces with two levels having inked areas higher than
noninked areas. Relief printing includes block printing,
flexography and letter press.
- Repeatability
- Ability of a device, such as an
imagesetter, to produce film or plates that yield images in
register.
- Reprographics
- General term for xerography, diazo and
other methods of copying used by designers, engineers,
architects or for general office use.
- Resolution
- Sharpness of an image on film, paper,
computer screen, disc, tape or other medium.
- Resolution Target
- An image, such as the GATF Star
Target, that permits evaluation of resolution on film,
proofs or plates.
- Reverse
- Type, graphic or illustration
reproduced by printing ink around its outline, thus allowing
the underlying color or paper to show through and form the
image. The image 'reverses out' of the ink color. Also
called knockout and liftout.
- RGB
- Abbreviation for red, green, blue, the
additive color primaries.
- Right Reading
- Copy that reads correctly in the
language in which it is written. Also describes a photo
whose orientation looks like the original scene, as compared
to a flopped image.
- Rotary Press
- Printing press which passes the
substrate between two rotating cylinders when making an
impression.
- Round Back Bind
- To casebind with a rounded (convex)
spine, as compared to flat back bind.
- Ruby Window
- Mask on a mechanical, made with
rubylith, that creates a window on film shot from the
mechanical.
- Rule
- Line used as a graphic element to
separate or organize copy.
- Ruleup
- Map or drawing given by a printer to a
stripper showing how a printing job must be imposed using a
specific press and sheet size. Also called press layout,
printer's layout and ruleout.
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- Saddle Stitch
- To bind by stapling sheets together
where they fold at the spine, as compared to side stitch.
Also called pamphlet stitch, saddle wire and stitch bind.
- Satin Finish
- Alternate term for dull finish on
coated paper.
- Scale
- To identify the percent by which
photographs or art should be enlarged or reduced to achieve,
the correct size for printing.
- Scanner
- Electronic device used to scan an
image.
- Score
- To compress paper along a straight
line so it folds more easily and accurately. Also called
crease.
- Screen Angles
- Angles at which screens intersect with
the horizontal line of the press sheet. The common screen
angles for separations are black 45 degree, magenta 75
degree, yellow 90 degree and cyan 105 degree.
- Screen Density
- Refers to the percentage of ink
coverage that a screen tint allows to print. Also called
screen percentage.
- Screen Printing
- Method of printing by using a squeegee
to force ink through an assembly of mesh fabric and a
stencil.
- Screen Ruling
- Number of rows or lines of dots per
inch or centimeter in a screen for making a screen tint or
halftone. Also called line count, ruling, screen frequency,
screen size and screen value.
- Screen Tint
- Color created by dots instead of solid
ink coverage. Also called Benday, fill pattern, screen tone,
shading, tint and tone.
- Selective Binding
- Placing signatures or inserts in
magazines or catalogs according to demographic or geographic
guidelines.
- Self Cover
- Usually in the book arena, a
publication not having a cover stock. A publication only
using text stock throughout.
- Self Mailer
- A printed item independent of an
envelope. A printed item capable of travel in the mailing
arena independently.
- Separated Art
- Art with elements that print in the
base color on one surface and elements that print in other
colors on other surfaces. Also called preseparated art.
- Separations
- Usually in the four-color process
arena, separate film holding qimages of one specific color
per piece of film. Black, Cyan, Magenta and Yellow. Can also
separate specific PMS colors through film.
- Serigraphic Printing
- Printing method whose image carriers
are woven fabric, plastic or metal that allow ink to pass
through some portions and block ink from passing through
other portions. Serigraphic printing includes screen and
mimeograph.
- Service Bureau
- Business using imagesetters to make
high resolution printouts of files prepared on
microcomputers. Also called output house and prep service.
- Setoff
- Undesirable transfer of wet ink from
the top of one sheet to the underside of another as they lie
in the delivery stack of a press. Also called offset.
- Shade
- Hue made darker by the addition of
black, as compared to tint.
- Shadows
- Darkest areas of a photograph or
illustration, as compared to midtones and high-lights.
- Sheetfed Press
- Press that prints sheets of paper, as
compared to a web press.
- Sheetwise
- Technique of printing one side of a
sheet with one set of plates, then the other side of the
sheet with a set of different plates. Also called work and
back.
- Shingling
- Allowance, made during paste-up or
stripping, to compensate for creep. Creep is the problem;
shingling is the solution. Also called stair stepping and
progressive margins.
- Side stitch
- To bind by stapling through sheets
along, one edge, as compared to saddle stitch. Also called
cleat stitch and side wire.
- Signature
- Printed sheet folded at least once,
possibly many times, to become part of a book, magazine or
other publication.
- Size
- Compound mixed with paper or fabric to
make it stiffer and less able to absorb moisture.
- Slip Sheets
- Separate sheets (stock) independent
from the original run positioned between the "printed run"
for a variety of reasons.
- Soft Dots
- Halftones dots with halos.
- Solid
- Any area of the sheet receiving 100
percent ink coverage, as compared to a screen tint.
- Soy-based Inks
- Inks using vegetable oils instead of
petroleum products as pigment vehicles, thus are easier on
the environment.
- Specialty Printer
- Printer whose equipment, supplies,
work flow and marketing is targeted to a particular category
of products.
- Specifications
- Complete and precise written
description of features of a printing job such as type size
and leading, paper grade and quantity, printing or binding
method. Abbreviated specs.
- Spectrophotometer
- Instrument used to measure the index
of refraction of color.
- Specular Highlight
- Highlight area with no printable dots,
thus no detail, as compared to a diffuse highlight. Also
called catchlight and dropout highlight.
- Spine
- Back or binding edge of a publication
- Spiral
Bind
- To bind using a spiral of continuous
wire or plastic looped through holes. Also called coil bind.
- Split Fountain
- Technique of putting ink colors next
to each other in the same ink fountain and printing them off
the same plate. Split fountains keep edges of colors
distinct, as compared to rainbow fountains that blend edges.
- Split Run
- (1) Different images, such as
advertisements, printed in different editions of a
publication. (2) Printing of a book that has some copies
bound one way and other copies bound another way.
- Spoilage
- Paper that, due to mistakes or
accidents, must be thrown away instead of delivered printed
to the customer, as compared to waste.
- Spot Color or Varnish
- One ink or varnish applied to portions
of a sheet, as compared to flood or painted sheet.
- Spread
- (1) Two pages that face each other and
are designed as one visual or production unit. (2) Technique
of slightly enlarging the size of an image to accomplish a
hairline trap with another image. Also called fatty.
- Standard Viewing Conditions
- Background of 60 percent neutral gray
and light that measures 5000 degrees Kelvin the color of
daylight on a bright day. Also called lighting standards.
- Stat
- Short for photostat, therefore a
general term for an inexpensive photographic print of line
copy or halftone.
- Statistical Process Control
- Method used by printers to ensure
quality and delivery times specified by customers.
Abbreviated SPC.
- Step and Repeat
- Prepress technique of exposing an
image in a precise, multiple pattern to create a flat or
plate. Images are said to be stepped across the film or
plate.
- Stocking Paper
- Popular sizes, weights and colors of
papers available for prompt delivery from a merchant's
warehouse.
- Stock Order
- Order for paper that a mill or
merchant sends to a printer from inventory at a warehouse,
as compared to a mill order.
- String Score
- Score created by pressing a string
against paper, as compared to scoring using a metal edge.
- Strip
- To assemble images on film for
platemaking. Stripping involves correcting flaws in film,
assembling pieces of film into flats and ensuring that film
and flats register correctly. Also called film assembly and
image assembly.
- Substance Weight
- Alternate term for basis weight,
usually referring to bond papers. Also called sub weight.
- Stumping (Blocking)
- In the book arena, hot die, foil or
other means in creating an image on a case bound book.
- Substrate
- Any surface or material on which
printing is done.
- Subtractive Color
- Color produced by light reflected from
a surface, as compared to additive color. Subtractive color
includes hues in color photos and colors created by inks on
paper.
- Subtractive Primary Color
- Yellow, magenta and cyan. In the
graphic arts, these are known as process colors because,
along with black, they are the inks colors used in
color-process printing.
- Supercalendered Paper
- Paper calendered using alternating
chrome and fiber rollers to produce a smooth, thin sheet.
Abbreviated SC paper.
- Surprint
- Taking an already printed matter and
re-printing again on the same.
- Swash Book
- A book in a variety of forms,
indicating specific stock in specific colors in a specific
thickness.
- SWOP
- Abbreviation for specifications for
web offset publications, specifications recommended for web
printing of publications.
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- Tabloid
- Using a broadsheet as a measure, one
half of a broadsheet. Measures 11x17 inches.
-
Tag
- Grade of dense, strong paper used for
products such as badges and file folders.
- Tagged Image File Format
- Computer file format used to store
images from scanners and video devices. Abbreviated TIFF.
- Target Ink Densities
- Densities of the four process inks as
recommended for various printing processes and grades of
paper. See also Total Area Coverage.
- Template
- Concerning a printing project's basic
details in regard to its dimensions. A standard layout.
- Text Paper
- Designation for printing papers with
textured surfaces such as laid or linen. Some mills also use
'text' to refer to any paper they consider top-of-the-line,
whether or not its surface has a texture.
- Thermography
- Method of printing using colorless
resin powder that takes on the color of underlying ink. Also
called raised printing.
- Thumbnails
- Initial ideas jotted on virtually
anything in regard to initial concept of a future project.
- Tint
- Screening or adding white to a solid
color for results of lightening that specific color.
- Tip In
- Usually in the book arena, adding an
additional page(s) beyond the normal process (separate
insertion).
- Tone Compression
- Reduction in the tonal range from
original scene to printed reproduction.
- Total Area Coverage
- Total of the dot percentages of the
process colors in the final film. Abbreviated for TAC. Also
called density of tone, maximum density, shadow saturation,
total dot density and total ink coverage.
- Touch Plate
- Plate that accents or prints a color
that four-color process printing cannot reproduce well
enough or at all. Also called kiss plate.
- Trade Shop
- Service bureau, printer or bindery
working primarily for other graphic arts professionals, not
for the general public.
- Transparency
- Positive photographic image on film
allowing light to pass through. Also called chrome, color
transparency and tranny. Often abbreviated TX.
- Trap
- To print one ink over another or to
print a coating, such as varnish, over an ink. The first
liquid traps the second liquid. See also Dry Traps and Wet
Traps.
- Trim Size
- The size of the printed material in
its finished stage (e.g., the finished trim size is 5 1\2 x
8 1\2).
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- Uncoated Paper
- Paper that has not been coated with
clay. Also called offset paper.
- Undercolor Addition
- Technique of making color separations
that increases the amount of cyan, magenta or yellow ink in
shadow areas. Abbreviated UCA.
- Undercolor Removal
- Technique of making color separations
such that the amount of cyan, magenta and yellow ink is
reduced in midtone and shadow areas while the amount of
black is increased. Abbreviated UCR.
- Universal Copyright Convention (UCC)
- A system to protect unique work from
reproducing without knowledge from the originator. To
qualify, one must register their work and publish a (c)
indicating registration.
- Unsharp Masking
- Technique of adjusting dot size to
make a halftone or separation appear sharper (in better
focus) than the original photo or the first proof. Also
called edge enhancement and peaking.
- Up
- Term to indicate multiple copies of
one image printed in one impression on a single sheet. "Two
up" or "three up" means printing the identical piece twice
or three times on each sheet.
- UV Coating
- Liquid applied to a printed sheet,
then bonded and cured with ultraviolet light.
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- Value
- The shade (darkness) or tint
(lightness) of a color. Also called brightness, lightness,
shade and tone.
- Varnish
- Liquid applied as a coating for
protection and appearance.
- Vellum Finish
- Somewhat rough, toothy finish.
- Velox
- Brand name for high-contrast
photographic paper.
- Viewing Booth
- Small area or room that is set up for
proper viewing of transparencies, color separations or press
sheets. Also called color booth. See also Standard Viewing
Conditions.
- Vignette
- Decorative design or illustration fade
to white.
- Vignette Halftone
- Halftone whose background gradually
and smoothly fades away. Also called degrade.
- Virgin Paper
- Paper made exclusively of pulp from
trees or cotton, as compared to recycled paper.
- VOC
- Abbreviation for volatile organic
compounds, petroleum substances used as the vehicles for
many printing inks.
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- Wash Up
- To clean ink and fountain solutions
from rollers, fountains, screens, and other press
components.
- Waste
- Unusable paper or paper damage during
normal makeready, printing or binding operations, as
compared to spoilage.
- Watermark
- Translucent logo in paper created
during manufacturing by slight embossing from a dandy roll
while paper is still approximately 90 percent water.
- Web Break
- Split of the paper as it travels
through a web press, causing operators to rethread the
press.
- Web Gain
- Unacceptable stretching of paper as it
passes through the press.
- Web Press
- Press that prints from rolls of paper,
usually cutting it into sheets after printing. Also called
reel-fed press. Web presses come in many sizes, the most
common being mini, half, three quarter (also called 8-pages)
and full (also called 16-pages).
- Wet Trap
- To print ink or varnish over wet ink,
as compared to dry trap.
- Window
- (1) In a printed product, a die-cut
hole revealing an image on the sheet behind it. (2) On a
mechanical, an area that has been marked for placement of a
piece of artwork.
- Wire Side
- Side of the paper that rests against
The Fourdrinier wire during papermaking, as compared to felt
side.
- With the Grain
- Parallel to the grain direction of the
paper being used, as compared to against the grain. See also
Grain Direction.
- Woodfree Paper
- Made with chemical pulp only. Paper
usually classified as calendered or supercalendered.
- Working Film
- Intermediate film that will be copied
to make final film after all corrections are made. Also
called buildups.
- Wove
- Paper manufactured without visible
wire marks, usually a fine textured paper.
- Wrong Reading
- An image that is backwards when
compared to the original. Also called flopped and reverse
reading.
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