|
 | What's
your budget for the project? |
 | What
type of project is this? |
 | What
kind of turnaround do you need from your printer? |
 | What
type of artwork do you plan to use? |
 | What
will your project be printed on? |
 | How
many colors do you have in mind? |
 | How
will the color you've chosen look on the paper you picked? |
 | When
should you proof and what kind of proofs will you need? |
 | What
binding and finishing steps are necessary? |
 | Are
you planning to do a press or finishing OK? |
| | |
| What's your
budget for the project? |  |
|
| | What
you can do with your printing project is largely determined by how much money
you can spend. If you have champagne tastes but a beer budget, you'll have to
make some compromises. |
| | |
| What type of project
is this? |  |
|
| | Consider
the size of the printed piece, how many copies you need, the number of colors
you plan to use, in general, and what you expect from the end product. Also, do
you plan to use bleeds? These factors and others will influence what you'll be
spending on the project and how long it will take your prepress service provider
and printer to produce it. All of these factors influence the cost and scheduling
of your project. |
| | |
| What kind of turnaround
do you need from your printer? |  |
|
| | Overnight?
A few days? A few weeks? Ask your printer about the normal turnaround time on
a job such as yours. If you need it sooner. let the printer know and ask if there
are additional charges for faster turnaround. Will the final product be a disposable
item or will it be reused? If it is a single-use item, you may not want
to invest as much time and money in it as you would for an item that will be reused.
|
| | |
| What type of
artwork do you plan to use? |  |
|
| |
• Line art • Drawings and illustrations
* Reverses * Electronic art * Photographs * Transparencies |
| | |
| What will your
project be printed on? |  |
|
| | Many
customers choose a paper stock without understanding its printing properties,
only to be disappointed when the job doesn't turn out as they'd expected. To avoid
such problems, work with your printer or paper merchant ahead of time to make
sure the paper you choose is suitable for your end product and whether or not
it fits into your budget. Among the things you'll want to consider are color,
size, weight, grade, grain, opacity, and finish. See the Technical Supplement
for more information on paper/substrate. |
| | |
| How many colors
do you have in mind? |  |
|
| | One
color? Two-color (typically black and a second color)? Four- color? Six colors
or more? Your color choice affects how your printed piece looks and what it costs.See
the Technical Supplement for more information on inks. Here are some of the things
you should consider and discuss with your printer as you make color decisions |
| | |
| How will the
color you've chosen look on the paper you picked? |  |
|
| |
The color and appearance of ink can actually change
depending on the color, texture, coating, and weight of the paper you're using.
The absorbency, gloss and whiteness of a paper greatly affect the appearance of
inks, especially special color match, metallic and fluorescent inks. Also, the
same color ink printed on coated paper stock can appear significantly different
when printed on uncoated stock. A special corporate
logo color, for instance, may require an ink formulation on the actual paper to
be used for the job. A representative print can be produced by the ink manufacturer
in their laboratory and will provide the best representation of that match color.
Ask your printer if a sample is required. If so, it is advisable to send a sample
of the ink on the production paper to the customer for approval. If
you want metallic or fluorescent colors, remember such inks are specialty items
and must be considered carefully. The final effect of these inks is highly dependent
on the quality of the paper stock being used. Even the best papers may require
a double hit of the ink for best results. Be sure to discuss this with your printer.
Also, it is wise to order these special inks well ahead of the press date.See
the Technical Supplement for more information on these and other inks Color
guides and color matching chip sets or swatches have a limited shelf life and
will change color over time. It is important to keep your color guides current.
Send your printer a chip or swatch of the color you want matched. Be
careful when trying to print a special color on one form as a CMYK color match
on another form. See the Technical Supplement for more information on spot color. |
| | |
| When should
you proof and what kind of proofs will you need? |  |
|
| | To
proof or not to proof should not be the question. When in doubt always proof a
job and proof often. Problems detected early in the production process are the
easiest and least expensive to correct. Waiting until a job is on the press to
check for mistakes is an expensive way to proof a job, and often too late. The
cost of a color proof is next to nothing compared to hearing, "Stop the press—something's
wrong." Along the prepress workflow path, there
are key places where proofing needs to be considered, if not mandated. A proof
not only guarantees that the design up to that point is correct, but also what
needs to be done at the next step is representative and properly communicated.
During the initial stages, a black and white copy may be an adequate proof. As
the design begins to take shape on the computer monitor, one or more digital color
proofs serve to ensure that the finer details are reproduced or modified properly
to match the customer's expectations. For workflow that is entirely digital. a
final contract proof may be all that is required to finish the job. As a communication
and quality control tool, a color proof serves as a contract for the customer,
who wants an accurate prediction of the final printed job. and as a visual color
target for the press operator. In a more traditional
conventional workflow, a photomechanical analog color proof, either overlay or
single sheet depending on the critical nature of the piece, may be appropriate
and necessary for customer okay and pressroom guidance. For black and white work
or two-color work, a blueline maybe adequate to confirm element accuracy and register
of the film separations. The types of proofs you choose will differ in cost and
quality, and the number of proofs will add to the overall turnaround time. Proofing
a job, however, can be viewed as an insurance policy of sorts—a small price
to pay up front to guard against trouble and expense down the road. See the Technical
Supplement for more information on Proofing. |
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| What binding
and finishing steps are necessary? |  |
|
| | Binding
and finishing encompasses a huge field of specialized processes and involve many
steps. Most of those steps will affect how a piece is designed, some will affect
how a piece is printed, some will affect how pieces are combined, and some will
affect the schedule and cost of a project. Watch especially for finishing steps
that occur after the piece is completed. For example, a 4 i/2-inch panel on a
brochure may fit the printer's sheet, may cut and fold correctly. but if the brochure
is to be placed in a rack with 4-inch slots, there is a problem. To avoid frustration
and potential expense, consider finishing steps as you plan, then check them again
each time you make a change in any of the project specifications. See the Binding/Finishing
section for more information. |
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| Are you planning
to do a press or finishing OK? |  |
|
| |
Press checks needs to be scheduled. so discuss this
with your printer early, during the planning stage. How
is your printed piece going to be delivered? Delivery considerations impose
limitations that may affect each step of the production process. For example,
if your final product will be inserted into a magazine or newspaper, the publisher
may have size, trim. bleed, weight and product identification requirements. These
requirements must be communicated to those who plan, design and print the product. If
you plan to mail your printed piece, this is the time to decide if a small change
in size or basis weight of the paper would reduce your postal costs. Make a dummy
of your project using paper with the same weight that you intend to use for production
of the final piece, then weight the dummy and determine your inailing costs. To
minimize postal costs, ask these questions: Must you
conform to weight and size limitations to stay within the amount budgeted for
postage? Can you take advantage
of special labeling discounts, such as bar codes, business reply cards or mail
permits. If so. make sure the designer understands these requirements. Are the
plans for paper, ink, printing and binding suitable for your delivery requirements?
Factors may include paper weight, requirements for sealing folded pieces, selecting
scuff-proof inks and designing noncrushable products. |
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