Dictionary Definition
printed adj : written in print characters or
produced by means of e.g. a printing press
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
printed- Pertaining to something written or published.
Verb
printed- past of print
Translations
- Italian: stampato
Extensive Definition
Printing is a process for reproducing text and
image, typically with ink on paper using a printing press. It
is often carried out as a large-scale industrial process, and is an
essential part of publishing and transaction printing.
History
Block printing in Europe
Block printing came to Christian Europe as a method for printing on cloth, where it was common by 1300. Images printed on cloth for religious purposes could be quite large and elaborate, and when paper became relatively easily available, around 1400, the medium transferred very quickly to small woodcut religious images and playing cards printed on paper. These prints were produced in very large numbers from about 1425 onwards.Around the mid-century, block-books, woodcut
books with both text and images, usually carved in the same block,
emerged as a cheaper alternative to manuscripts and books printed
with movable
type. These were all short heavily illustrated works, the
bestsellers of the day, repeated in many different block-book
versions: the Ars moriendi
and the Biblia
pauperum were the most common. There is still some controversy
among scholars as to whether their introduction preceded or, the
majority view, followed the introduction of movable
type, with the range of estimated dates being between about
1440–1460.
The volume of Joseph Needham's Science and
Civilization in China dealing with Paper and printing has a chapter
that suggests that "European block printers must not only have seen
Chinese samples, but perhaps had been taught by missionaries or
others who had learned these un-European methods from Chinese
printers during their residence in China.", but he also admitted
that the "only evidence of European printing transmitted from China
is a lack of counterevidence". However, paper itself was needed for the
printing process and this came to Europe via trade with the Arabs
from China. Historians acknowledge that paper indeed came from
China without which printing would have been impossible, however,
there is less direct evidence of the influence of printing
technology from Asia and its influence on European printing
technology.
Movable type printing
Movable type allowed for much more flexible processes than hand copying or block printing.In East Asia
For a description of- the oldest surviving metal type
- early books printed with such metal type
- the oldest surviving movable metal print book printed in Korea in 1377,
- the Korean font casting process as recorded by Song Hyon in the 15th c., and
- problems due to the nature of the Chinese language
Movable type
By 593 A.D., the first printing press was invented in China, and
the first printed newspaper was available in Beijing in 700 A.D. It
was a woodblock printing. And the Diamond Sutra, the earliest known
complete woodblock printed book with illustrations was printed in
China in 868 A.D. And Chinese printer Bi Sheng
invented movable type in 1041 A.D. in Chinahttp://www.minnesota-china.com/Education/emSciTech/inventions.htm.
Sheng used clay type, which broke easily, but Wang
Zhen later carved a more durable type from wood by 1298 AD, and
developed a complex system of revolving tables and
number-association with written Chinese characters that made
typesetting and printing more efficient.
The transition from wood type to metal type
occurred during the Goryeo
Dynasty of Korea and is credited
to Choe
Yun-ui (최윤의). Records indicate that by 1234, books were being
printed in Korea with movable metal type, though the earliest
surviving text is from 1377. In China metal
movable type was not pioneered until the work of the printer
Hua Sui
in 1490 AD. Movable type
was widely used in China in both wooden and metal type printing,
yet the European-style printing press introduced to China in
relatively recent times greatly increased the efficiency and speed
of printing.
East Asian printing technology may possibly have
diffused into Europe through the trade routes from China through
India or the
Arabic world.
There is no actual evidence that Gutenberg may have known of the
Korean processes for movable type. However, some authors admit this
possibility, and argue that movable metal type had been an active
enterprise in Korea since 1234 and there was communication between
West and East.
In Europe
It is traditionally believed that Johannes Gutenberg, of the German city of Mainz, developed European printing technology around 1439 and in just over a decade, the European age of printing began, but new research may indicate that it was a more complex evolutionary process spread over multiple locations. Also, Johann Fust and Peter Schöffer experimented with Guttenburg in Mainz. Genealogically, all modern movable type printing can be traced back to a single source, Gutenberg's printing press which he derived from the design of long known agricultural presses. East Asian style movable type printing, which was based on laborious manual rubbing and which had been scarcely used, practically died out after the introduction of European style printing in the 15th century.Gutenberg is also credited with the introduction
of an oil-based ink which was more durable than previously used
water-based inks. Having worked as a professional goldsmith, Gutenberg made
skillful use of the knowledge of metals he had learned as a
craftsman. Gutenberg was also the first to make his type from an
alloy of lead, tin, and
antimony, which was
critical for producing durable type that produced high-quality
printed books, and proved to be more suitable for printing than the
clay, wooden or bronze types used in East Asia. To create these
lead types, Gutenberg used what some considered his most ingenious
invention, a special matrix wherewith the moulding of new movable
types with an unprecedented precision at short notice became
feasible. Within a year after his B42, Gutenberg also published the
first coloured prints.
Gutenberg's invention of the printing press
revolutionized communication and book production leading to the
spread of knowledge. Rapidly, printing spread from Germany by
emigrating German printers, but also by foreign apprentices
returning home. A printing press was built in Venice in 1469, and
by 1500 the city had 417 printers. In 1470 Johann
Heynlin set up a printing press in Paris. In 1473 Kasper
Straube published the
Almanach cracoviense ad annum 1474 in Kraków.
Dirk
Martens set up a printing press in Aalst (Flanders) in 1473.
He printed a book about the two lovers of Enea
Piccolomini who became pope Pius II.In 1476 a
printing press was set up in England by William
Caxton. Belarusian Francysk
Skaryna printed the first book in Slavic language on August 6,
1517. The Italian Juan Pablos set up an imported press in Mexico City
in 1539. The first printing
press in Southeast
Asia was set up in the Philippines by
the Spanish in
1593. Stephen
Day was the first to build a printing press in North America at
Massachusetts
Bay in 1638, and helped establish the Cambridge Press..
Printing houses
Early printing houses (near the time of
Gutenberg) were run by "master printers." These printers owned
shops, selected and edited manuscripts, determined the sizes of
print runs, sold the works they produced, raised capital and
organized distribution. Some master printing houses became the
cultural centre for literati such as Erasmus.
- Print shop apprentices: Apprentices, usually between the ages of 15 and 20, worked for master printers. Apprentices were not required to be literate, and literacy rates at the time were very low, in comparison to today. Apprentices prepared ink, dampened sheets of paper, and assisted at the press. An apprentice who wished to learn to become a compositor had to learn Latin and spend time under the supervision of a journeyman.
- Journeyman printers: After completing their apprenticeships, journeyman (so called from the French "journée" for day) printers were free to move employers. This facilitated the spread of printing to areas that were less print-centred.
- Compositors: Those who set the type for printing.
- Pressmen: the person who worked the press. This was physically labour intensive.
The earliest-known image of a European,
Gutenberg-style print shop is the Dance of Death by Matthias Huss,
at Lyon, 1499. This image depicts a compositor standing at a
compositor's case being grabbed by a skeleton. The case is raised
to facilitate his work. The image also shows a pressman being
grabbed by a skeleton. At the right of the printing house a
bookshop is shown.
Financial aspects
Court records from the city of Mainz document that Johannes Fust was, for some time, Gutenberg's financial backer.By the sixteenth century jobs associated with
printing were becoming increasingly specialized. Structures
supporting publishers were more and more complex, leading to this
division of labour. In Europe between 1500 and 1700 the role of the
Master Printer was dying out and giving way to the
bookseller—publisher. Printing during this period had a stronger
commercial imperative than previously. Risks associated with the
industry however were substantial, although dependent on the nature
of the publication.
Bookseller publishers negotiated at trade fairs
and at print shops. Jobbing work appeared in which printers did
menial tasks in the beginning of their careers to support
themselves.
1500–1700: Publishers developed several new
methods of funding projects.
- Cooperative associations/publication syndicates—a number of individuals shared the risks associated with printing and shared in the profit. This was pioneered by the French.
- Subscription publishing—pioneered by the English in the early 17th century. A prospectus for a publication was drawn up by a publisher to raise funding. The prospectus was given to potential buyers who signed up for a copy. If there were not enough subscriptions the publication did not go ahead. Lists of subscribers were included in the books as endorsements. If enough people subscribed a reprint might occur. Some authors used subscription publication to bypass the publisher entirely.
- Installment publishing—books were issued in parts until a complete book had been issued. This was not necessarily done with a fixed time period. It was an effective method of spreading cost over a period of time. It also allowed earlier returns on investment to help cover production costs of subsequent installments.
The Mechanick Exercises, by Joseph Moxon, in
London, 1683, was said to be the first publication done in
installments.
Publishing trade organizations allowed publishers
to organize business concerns collectively. Systems of
self-regulation occurred in these arrangements. For example, if one
publisher did something to irritate other publishers he would be
controlled by peer pressure. Such systems are known as cartels, and are in most
countries now considered to be in restraint of trade. These
arrangements helped deal with labour unrest among journeymen, who
faced difficult working conditions. Brotherhoods predated unions,
without the formal regulations now associated with unions.
In most cases, publishers bought the copyright in a work from the
author, and made some arrangement about the possible profits. This
required a substantial amount of capital in addition to the capital
for the physical equipment and staff. Alternatively, an author who
had sufficient money would
sometimes keep the copyright himself, and simply
pay the printer for the production of the book. For further
developments, see main article:copyright
Modern printing technology
Across the world, over 45 trillion pages (2005 figure) are printed annually. In 2006 there were approximately 30,700 printing companies in the United States, accounting for $112 billion, according to the 2006 U.S. Industry & Market Outlook by Barnes Reports. Print jobs that move through the Internet made up 12.5% of the total U.S. Printing market last year, according to research firm InfoTrend/CAP Ventures.Books and newspapers are printed today
using the technique of offset
lithography. Other common techniques include:
- pad printing popular for its unique ability to print on complex 3-dimensional surfaces.
- flexography used for packaging, labels, newspapers
- relief print, (mainly used for catalogues),
- screen printing from T-shirts to floor tiles
- rotogravure mainly used for magazines and packaging,
- inkjet used typically to print a small number of books or packaging, and also to print a variety of materials from high quality papers simulate offset printing, to floor tiles; Inkjet is also used to apply mailing addresses to direct mail pieces
- hot wax dye transfer
- laser printing mainly used in offices and for transactional printing (bills, bank documents). Laser printing is commonly used by direct mail companies to create variable data letters or coupons, for example.
Gravure
Gravure
printing is an intaglio
printing technique, where the image to be printed is made up of
small depressions in the surface of the printing plate. The cells
are filled with ink and the excess is scraped off the surface with
a doctor blade, then a rubber-covered roller presses paper onto the
surface of the plate and into contact with the ink in the cells.
The printing plates are usually made from copper and may be
produced by digital engraving or laser etching.
Gravure printing is used for long, high-quality
print runs such as magazines, mail-order catalogues, packaging, and
printing onto fabric and wallpaper. It is also used for printing
postage stamps and decorative plastic laminates, such as kitchen
worktops.
Digital printing
Digital printing accounts for approximately 9% of the 45 trillion pages printed (2005 figure) around the world.Printing at home or in an office or engineering environment
is subdivided into:
- small format (up to ledger size paper sheets), as used in business offices and libraries
- wide format (up to 3' or 914mm wide rolls of paper), as used in drafting and design establishments.
Some of the more common printing technologies
are
- line printing—where pre-formed characters are applied to the paper by lines
- daisy wheel—where pre-formed characters are applied individually
- dot-matrix—which produces arbitrary patterns of dots with an array of printing studs
- heat transfer—like early fax machines or modern receipt printers that apply heat to special paper, which turns black to form the printed image
- blueprint—and related chemical technologies
- inkjet—including bubble-jet—where ink is sprayed onto the paper to create the desired image
- laser—where toner consisting primarily of polymer with pigment of the desired colours is melted and applied directly to the paper to create the desired image.
Vendors typically stress the total cost to
operate the equipment, involving complex calculations that include
all cost factors involved in the operation as well as the capital
equipment costs, amortization, etc. For the most part, toner
systems beat inkjet in the long run, whereas inkjets are less
expensive in the initial purchase price.
Professional digital
printing (using toner)
primarily uses an electrical charge to transfer toner or liquid ink
to the substrate it is printed on. Digital print quality has
steadily improved from early color and black & white copiers to
sophisticated colour digital presses like the Xerox iGen3, the
Kodak Nexpress and the HP Indigo
Digital Press series. The iGen3 and Nexpress use toner
particles and the Indigo uses liquid ink. All three are made for
small runs and variable data, and rival offset in quality. Digital
offset presses are called direct
imaging presses; although these receive computer files and
automatically turn them into print-ready plates, they cannot insert
variable data.
Small press and fanzines generally use digital
printing or more rarely xerography. Prior to the
introduction of cheap photocopying the use of machines such as the
spirit
duplicator, hectograph, and mimeograph was common.
Eight steps in Graphic Printing Production
Graphic print Production Graphic printing is related with the Print production services, sourcing print, providing a competitive quotation, lithographic and digital printing according to requirement, sourcing services and so much more. Every company in printing, provide a complete solution. There are different phases and steps involved in graphic print production usually these are four phases and eight steps involve in printing production.Four main phases involved in Graphic Printing
Production
1. Concept visualization
2. Creative Production (Design phase)
3. Industrial Production
4. Logistics
The first phase consists of further two working
steps which are Strategic Work and Creative Work, and the end
result of this phase is the finalization of the idea and approved
sketches of graphical design.
In the second phase which consistes Image and
Text step and Layout step. The design is designed using some
software and it takes a real form than sketch and after this phase
the design can be used for printing.
In the third phase the developed design is taken
and put to final product. This phase consists of Prepress,
Printing, Finishing and Binding steps.
The last phase of the process is distribution of
the finished printed product.
Eight steps involve in printing production
1. Strategic Work 2. Creative Work 3. Image and
text 4. Layout 5. Prepress 6. Printing 7. Finishing and binding 8.
Distribution Strategic Work: Creative Work: Image and text: The
next step is to placement of image and text on your required print.
Either you got it from cd, scanner, digital camera or design by
yourself then the right placement of text in the print. You have to
consider that what will be the right effect of image and text after
the printing. Layout Prepress: The following items have each been
considered part of prepress at one time or another: typesetting,
copyediting, markup, proofreading, page layout, screening (of
continuous-tone images such as photographs), retouching, page
assembly (stripping), imposition (combination of many pages into a
single signature form), trapping (also referred to as spreading and
choking), separation (specifying images or text to be put on plates
applying individual printing mediums [inks, varnishes, etc.] to a
common print) and plate making (photomechanical exposure and
processing of light-sensitive emulsion on a printing plate).
Printing: Printing is a process for reproducing text and image,
typically with ink on paper using a printing press. It is often
carried out as a large-scale industrial process, and is an
essential part of publishing and transaction printing, lot of form
of printing are used, like offset printing, digital printing etc.
In printing we have papers that first we set the printing plates,
adjust the ink and then set the papers sheets and start printing
until printer not be ready to print accurate, desired printing
sheet. so the papers used are called waste papers. Finishing and
Binding: After the completion of printing , next step is how to the
arrange the prints and how to finishing. 'Finishing' is the overall
name given to several types of process; all of which convert the
output of a printing operation into a finished product
For bookbinding and printed media, these
processes can include: - Cutting & Trimming - Folding -
Stitching - Pasting/Gluing/Adhesive Binding - Book Finishing -
Packaging. Usually when the printing is finished huge rolls of
now-printed paper are cut and put together so that the pages fall
in the correct order. Pages are also bound together, by staples or
glue, in this step of the process. For the paper complete finishing
components in the stitcher machine have the knives, which trim the
paper to the final delivered size. The product is then ready to be
shipped to the end destination Distribution:
See also
- Pad printing
- Bi Sheng
- Color printing
- Converters (industry)
- Flexography
- Foil imaging
- Foil stamping
- Hot metal typesetting
- In-mould decoration
- In-mould labelling
- Intaglio (printmaking)
- Jang Young Sil
- Johannes Gutenberg
- Letterpress printing
- Movable type
- Offset printing
- Print on demand
- Printing press
- Printmaking
- Rotary printing press
- Spread of printing
- Typography
- Wang Zhen
- Waterless printing
External links
- American Printing History Association - numerous links to online resources and other organizations
- The development of book and printing. English website of the Gutenberg-Museum Mainz (Germany)
- Planet Typography - history of printing - selection of international sites dedicated to the history of printing
- Learn about printing—International Paper
- BPSnet - The website of the British Printing Society
- Children of the Code - Online Video: The DNA of Science, The Alphabet and Printing
- Printing Industries of the Americas /GAIN Net - national trade association for printers and companies in the graphic arts.
References
Further reading
- Five Hundred Years of Printing
- Tam, Pui-Wing The New Paper Trail, The Wall Street Journal Online, February 13, 2006 Pg.R8
- Woong-Jin-Wee-In-Jun-Gi #11 Jang Young Sil by Baek Sauk Gi. Copyright 1987 Woongjin Publishing Co., Ltd. Pg. 61.
- Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, Cambridge University Press, September 1980, Paperback, 832 pages, ISBN 0-521-29955-1
- Marshall McLuhan, The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (1962) Univ. of Toronto Press (1st ed.); reissued by Routledge & Kegan Paul ISBN 0-7100-1818-5.
Early printers manuals
- The classic manual of early hand-press technology is
- A somewhat later one, showing 18th century developments is
printed in Arabic: طباعة
printed in Catalan: Impressió
printed in Czech: Knihtisk
printed in Danish: Bogtryk
printed in German: Druck
(Reproduktionstechnik)
printed in Spanish: Impresión
printed in Esperanto: Presarto
printed in Persian: چاپ
printed in French: Imprimerie
printed in Indonesian: Percetakan
printed in Icelandic: Prentun
printed in Italian: Stampa
printed in Hebrew: דפוס
printed in Dutch: Boekdrukkunst
printed in Japanese: 印刷
printed in Korean: 인쇄
printed in Norwegian: Trykking
printed in Norwegian Nynorsk: Trykking
printed in Polish: Druk
printed in Russian: Книгопечатание
printed in Simple English: Printing
printed in Serbian: Штампарство
printed in Finnish: Kirjapainotaito
printed in Swedish: Tryckteknik
printed in Thai: การพิมพ์
printed in Ukrainian: Друкарство
printed in Vietnamese: In ấn
printed in Turkish: Matbaacılık
printed in Chinese: 印刷
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
autograph, autographic, calligraphic, carved, chirographic, creased, cursive, cut, enchased, engraved, engrossed, flowing, furrowed, glyphic, graphic, graphoanalytic, graphologic, graphometric, graved, graven, grooved, holograph, holographic, impressed, imprinted, in longhand, in
print, in shorthand, in writing, incised, inscribed, insculptured, italic, italicized, lined, longhand, manuscript, marked, on paper, penciled, penned, running, scriptorial, scriptural, sculptured, shorthand, stamped, stylographic, tooled, typeset, written