
Ink
Jet Printing: A non-impact printing process in which an
intermittent or continuous stream of microscopic ink droplets
are projected onto a substrate at high velocity from a
pressurized system, the quality of the printer determines the
speed and accuracy of the spray
Since their
introduction in the latter half of the 1980s, inkjet printers
have grown in popularity and performance. An inkjet printer is
any printer that places extremely small droplets of ink onto
paper to create an image. If you ever look at a piece of paper
that has come out of an inkjet printer, you know that the dots
are extremely small (usually between 50 and 60 microns in
diameter), so small that they are tinier than the diameter of a
human hair (70 microns)! These dots are positioned very
precisely, with resolutions of up to 1440x720 dots per inch
(dpi). The dots can have different colors combined together to
create photo-quality images, our printers use CMYK (cyan,
magenta, yellow and black) to make up the colors of any print.
Our Mimaki uses this style of printing, it works the same as a
desktop model but 10 times bigger, with better ink and is much
more accurate in the placement of inks.
How Long Has Ink Jet
Printing Been Around?
Although inkjet printers
only appeared on the consumer market in the late 1980s, they had
been under development for more than twenty years by that time.
In the mid-1970s, printer companies realized the potential of
the technology that would make dot matrix printers obsolete. The
challenge, however, was to come up with a way to create an
affordable inkjet printer that would reliably create
high-quality printouts. The quality of the printed page depends
largely on the relationship between the ink, the print head, and
the paper. Researchers had a hard time creating a controlled
flow of ink from the print head onto the page, and preventing
the print head from becoming clogged with dried ink. Once these
challenges were met by Canon and Hewlett Packard in the late
1980s, liquid inkjet printers began to come on the market.
The Advantages of Ink Jet
Printing
- Ink jet printing can
be used to method for printing into fabric/textiles.
- Ink jet printed
textiles are very durable and can be used for numerous
outdoor applications.
- Full Color Process –
no difference in cost between 1,2,3,4 color designs
- Can print larger
print sizes than a litho press (or screen press)
- The proof is an
actual output of your file on your fabric of choice
- Photographic quality
image capability
- Very cost effective
- More elegant look and
feel than vinyl or plastic
- Portability – can
easily be rolled/shipped
- Lightweight
- Easy to fit stands,
frames, & structures
- Many options to
choose from
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