digital foiling - Digital Printer https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/topic/digital-foiling/ Digital Printer magazine Wed, 06 Dec 2023 16:01:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Healeys adds AccurioShine 3600 with iFoil One https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/88728/healeys-adds-accurioshine-3600-with-ifoil-one/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/88728/healeys-adds-accurioshine-3600-with-ifoil-one/#respond Mon, 04 Dec 2023 12:49:20 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=88728 Ipswich-based Healeys Printers has installed a Konica Minolta AccurioShine 3600 inkjet spot UV coater with iFoil One in-line hot foil stamping module

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Following the signing of an order at The Print Show in September 2023, Ipswich-based Healeys Printers has installed a Konica Minolta AccurioShine 3600 inkjet spot UV coater with iFoil One in-line hot foil stamping module, in order to bring digital embellishment in-house.

The MGI-derived AccurioShine 3600 with iFoil One will enable Healeys to add spot UV and digital foil to short run work. Managing director Philip Dodd commented, ‘We had looked at the options for embellishment pre-Covid, but we felt the time was now right to enhance our creative options, to expand our customer offering, and to meet market demands. The AccurioShine 3600 enables us to differentiate our offering whilst enjoying the considerable benefits of flexibility that a digital solution brings.’

Mr Dodd also told Digital Printer at the time of the order signing that what Healeys would save on external finishing services would pay for the cost of the AccurioShine, and that the company would be looking at offering a trade service based around the machine to other printers and finishers, including the supplier it had been using for conventional foiling, for whom short runs were uneconomic.

The AccurioShine 3600 can add multiple coating and dimensional texture effects in a single pass on sheets up B3+ (364 x 750mm). Applications include enhancing business cards, greeting cards, photobook covers, and carton packaging consistent with the format. The machine also features artificial intelligence for registration, and an energy saving LED curing system. In combination with the iFoil One hot foil stamping module, it offers a range of high-impact finishing effects including personalised embossed foil. This can be used with variable data printing (VDP), to add impact to tickets, personalised packages and labels, invitations and one-to-one marketing items.

Richard Kilduff, channel manager for commercial printing at Konica Minolta UK, stated, ‘We are delighted to have partnered with Healeys Printers with their installation of the new AccurioShine 3600. It is an ideal solution for professional printers that are looking to lead the market and add real innovation to their traditional print offering. Digitising and automating manual embellishment processes allows for much greater flexibility and cost control, which in turn can drive business growth in new and interesting areas.’

 

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Cause and effect https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/key-articles/86558/cause-and-effect/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/key-articles/86558/cause-and-effect/#respond Fri, 03 Nov 2023 11:40:31 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=key_article&p=86558 Special effects printing is a way to add impact, value and margin to every sheet but there are a lot of ways it can be achieved digitally

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Special effects printing is a way to add impact, value and margin to every sheet but there are a lot of ways it can be achieved digitally, at different points in the production process. Michael Walker shines a light on the options.

What’s now called embellishment or special effects used to be a group of purely post-press operations. These included lamination, spot or flood varnishing and foiling (hot or cold). Other eye-catching things have always had to be done in or on the press – if you wanted metallic colours you had to use a special ink or print on a metallised substrate; the same applied for fluorescent or other special colours.

Digital print has blurred those boundaries, bringing a number of ways of achieving the same or ‘close enough’ effects, combined with the flexibility and minimal set-up requirements characteristic of digital print. These also split into in-press effects and subsequently-applied effects.

Before looking at these in detail, it’s also worth noting that a sustainability argument is emerging for digital embellishment as an alternative to more conventional processes. This comes from Scodix, which makes stand-alone ‘embellishment presses’ (distributed in the UK by Friedheim) that can apply a wide range of decorative effects to printed sheets, with full digital flexibility in each.

Scodix carried out a lifecycle assessment of its digital foiling options which found that compared to conventional hot stamp foiling, its version reduces CO2e (CO2 equivalent) by 85%, fossil fuel usage by nearly 85%, and water consumption by 80% per B1 sheet. The study, carried out by EcamRicert, and Mérieux NutriSciences Companies, compared the enhancement of a single B1 sheet through to 100,000 B1 sheets using Scodix foil (175g) versus traditional foiling methods.

That’s only one of the options that Scodix offers and there’s no indication given that any of the other supported techniques offer comparable advantages. However, like any other form of digital printing, it seems likely that overall wastage of materials and energy is likely to be lower simply through the ability to only print or finish the number required.

The main argument in favour of these types of effects though is that they add impact to printed products and therefore margin to your work. Some you can only do if you bought the right press, though they could also be a factor in choosing a new one. There’s an increasing number of toner presses that offer additional colours which may include clear ‘varnish’, white, fluorescent and metallic colours, though usually only one or sometimes two at a time.

 

Plus-one – or more

Machines that offer a fifth colour include Xerox’s iGen line and Ricoh’s Pro C7200, also sold by Heidelberg as the Versafire EV (and about to be replaced by the Pro C7500, though we’ve not seen any specification for this yet). Kodak’s Nexpress and Nexfinity models could do this too, with options over where in the laydown sequence the fifth colour went, though both are now discontinued. Moving up to six colours brings in the popular Xerox Iridesse, and the more recent Fujifilm Revoria, while most HP Indigos can handle up to seven colours, though of course click charges go up in proportion with all extra colour presses. Xerox also offers a conversion kit for two-pass printing on its entry-level PrimeLink C9065/C9070, which potentially allows the use of up to eight colours, albeit with a complete change of toner cartridges between passes.

The exact choice of extra colours varies by manufacturer, but in addition to white – for use on coloured or transparent substrates – and clear – used to create flood or spot varnish effects – fluorescent or ‘neon’ colours are offered, particularly pink and sometimes yellow. These can replace or be mixed with their standard CMYK equivalents to expand the colour gamut for more eye-catching effects. A few offer metallic toners too, which again can be printed solid or mixed to provide novel colours and finishes.

 

After the event

Post-press options are more about foiling, spot varnish and various creative lamination processes, often in combination. A good entry-level choice here is foil-over-toner, a two-pass method that uses ‘real’ foil in a laminator like Vivid’s Matrix models or those from Caslon, Foliant (sold via IFS), Komfi (from Friedheim) or Autobond. Similar options also come from GMP and Intec, now part of the Plockmatic group.

Cause and effect

An entry-level option for foil-over-toner is Vivid’s Matrix, seen here at a trade show

In these, the initial colour print is first laminated with a clear film, then printed again with the foil pattern in black toner on top of the film, before a second pass through the laminator transfers the foil to the partially melted black toner. It’s a more labour-intensive process but it works with a very wide range of foil types and doesn’t require special consumables.

Then there are the fully ‘digital’ embellishment devices that offer spot UV and/or foiling in a single operation. This category includes devices like Duplo’s B2 DuSense 8000, which is offered in various configurations providing spot UV, digital foiling or both, including a pre-treatment option for expanding the types of print that can be handled. It’s also possible to build up textured ‘3D’ effects with multiple passes, which the smaller B3 DuSense 810 also supports. An alternative is the B3+ Konica Minolta AccurioShine 3600, which uses technology from MGI, in which Konica Minolta holds a significant stake. It too can produce ‘dimensional’ effects.

At the top end of the digital embellishment market are the ranges from Konica Minolta/MGI and Scodix. These are dedicated industrial production devices that offer UV varnish and foiling, with Scodix offering a particularly wide range of foils and finished effects, while MGI’s line goes up to B1 sheet size in the form of the print-and-embellish AlphaJet that was formally launched in October 2022. Kurz is another player at the industrial end of the scale, having bought Steinemann, whose inkjet varnish and foiling systems it was already marketing as Digital Metal. These include the sheet-fed B2 DM-Smartliner for 2D flat varnishing and foiling and the DM-Maxliner for raised and textured effects.

Whether you’re just ready to dip a toe into digital embellishment and cautious with the investment, or know that you’ve got a ready market for it but need to be sure it’s good enough and fast enough to meet your customers’ needs, there should be something to suit and help your work shine.

 

Preparing files for embellishment

All digital embellishment processes require ‘artwork’ to control where the effects are applied. Usually this means creating additional layers in the originating applications and/or print PDFs, though some vendors offer DFE-based tools to create embellishment guides or colour substitutions from standard PDFs on-the-fly.

Andrew Bailes-Collins of Ultimate Technographics, which makes imposition, nesting and ganging software, has written a handy guide to preparing generic PDFs that should process correctly through most embellishment vendors’ DFEs and thus avoid some of the common pitfalls that require manual reworking in the prepress studio.

Called PDF Creation for Digital Embellishment, it covers the use of spot colours, layers, knock-out and overprint and choice of correct versions of PDF for hand-off. It’s available free from Ultimate Technographics’ website.

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Solopress expands colour range of digital foiling https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/76418/solopress-expands-colour-range-of-digital-foiling/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/76418/solopress-expands-colour-range-of-digital-foiling/#respond Wed, 30 Nov 2022 12:19:30 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=76418 Solopress has expanded its range of colour options on foil printing.

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Solopress has expanded its range of colour options on foil printing.

The new colours include bright gold, green, turquoise, blue, red and black. The Essex-based printer uses Konica Minolta’s JETVarnish 3DS technology to apply the coloured foils, followed by a sealing coat of UV varnish for added shine and durability. This method allows them to print both large expanses of foil and delicate details as fine as 0.5mm.

Print products benefitting from the new options include flyers, leaflets, business cards, greeting cards, postcards, invitations, brochures and presentation folders.

Managing director Simon Cooper said, ‘Following the success of foil printed products, we felt the time was right to expand the range and offer a broader choice of colours. With Christmas approaching, we’re hoping customers will embrace the new options and add some colour and shine to their seasonal print.

‘Foil printing requires customers to provide two layers of artwork: one that indicates the foiled area, and one with the remaining design elements to be printed conventionally.’

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Embellishment advances https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/key-articles/76231/embellishment-advances/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/key-articles/76231/embellishment-advances/#respond Mon, 14 Nov 2022 12:50:32 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=key_article&p=76231 What was once called special effects and is now embellishment offers vast potential for stunning new creative effects, but can also add value and help to avoid digital print following colour offset in a race to the bottom in pricing, says Simon Eccles

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What was once called special effects and is now embellishment offers vast potential for stunning new creative effects, but can also add value and help to avoid digital print following colour offset in a race to the bottom in pricing, says Simon Eccles

The term ‘embellishment’ can encompass inline printed effects such as metallic, pearlescent or fluorescent inks, or post-press processes such as raised and textured effects – sometimes called ‘tactile’ or ‘haptic’ – plus a wide variety of foiled effects that can range from mirror-bright metallics through diffraction and holographic effects, or just special colours.

A lot of the recent action has been over the Atlantic, but much of it is relevant to the UK and Europe. September saw the existing US based Foil & Specialty Effects Association (FSEA) announce the formation of the more focused Digital Embellishment Alliance (DEA), which it describes as a community to create educational and communication opportunities in the growing digital print embellishment segment.

This followed a three-day event in June in Minneapolis called Amplify Print, organised by the FSEA and APTech, which highlighted digital embellishment.

‘In the world of digital print embellishments, we see a market that is on the cusp of going mainstream but still suffers from an awareness issue at the brand and designer level,’ explained Gene Petrie, chair of the FSEA board of directors. ‘A key aim of the DEA is to help users and manufacturers educate their customers and increase understanding of how these digital embellishment technologies can help brands increase their print ROI.’ This year’s LabelExpo in Chicago, the first one to be held since the 2019 show in Brussels, featured a Digital Embellishment Trail for the first time, where stands featuring these effects were flagged up.

While the market for label embellishment is different to commercial printing and packaging, it’s also an indicator of which way the wind is blowing. It’s also worth mentioning Actega’s unique EcoLeaf filmless foiling technology, so far only for narrow web label presses, which applies metallic nanoflakes to a special inkjetted fluid to give a mirror-smooth metallic finish with no waste.

Inline on presses

Digital presses increasingly offer fifth and even sixth units that can take a variety of special toners, some to extend the colour gamut and some to add embellishments such as metallics, spot gloss or other effects. Kodak was the first to really make a go of this in 2008 with the fifth unit on its second-generation Nexpresses, which not only offered a wide range of special colours but could build up a raised ‘dimensional’ embossed effect with clear toner.

Embellishment advances

An example of the effects achievable with the combination
of digital spot UV and foiling on Duplo’s DuSense 8000

This has been continued with the latest Nexfinity models, whose fifth unit can produce 13 effects, including gold, silver, dimensional or gloss clear, and an opaque white. Xerox has also offered extra colours for years, most notably with its Iridesse model, which as the name suggests majors on its special effects abilities. Iridesse is still the only dry toner press to offer six colour stations, though HP Indigo liquid toner presses can have up to seven. Iridesse can run special toners in the first and sixth, or fifth and sixth positions – you might choose white in the first position as an undercoat on clear, dark or metallised substrates. Special toners can be white, clear (high or low gloss), fluorescent pink, gold or silver. The past few years have seen Xerox introduce add-on embellishment options as ‘Adaptive CMYK+’ kits for the mid-production Versants and the entry-level PrimeLink C9065/C9070.

These allow users to swap out the CMYK cartridges for a second embellishment pass. There’s a choice of ‘Vivid’ (silver, gold, white and clear, or fluorescent (cyan, magenta yellow, plus normal black). These can be fitted aftermarket if needed. Switching between toner sets takes 10 minutes or so, but Xerox Europe’s head of marketing Kevin O’Donnell says that it allows smaller printers to broaden their offerings and keep embellishment work inhouse. The high end iGen 6 has a fifth unit too, which gained a new fluorescent yellow toner option last year, alongside white, clear and some Pantone specials. Ricoh’s Pro C7200sx series toner presses have an inline fifth unit that can run white, clear, neon yellow, neon pink and ‘invisible’ security red.

White can run as the first colour if needed as an undercoat. HP Indigo digital presses are still unique in the way they can run up to seven colours with easy swapping. ‘Special’ inks include two white types, gloss and matt clear, silver, fluorescents (green, orange and pink), plus gamut[1]extending and tone-smoothing colours. Xeikon is developing a range of embellishment modules for its web toner presses that it calls Fusion; at LabelExpo it demonstrated an opaque white and silver printing on clear film. Foiling with laminators The post-press ‘sleeking’ market of foil embellishment via lightly modified thermal laminators makes a very attractive entry level for jobs where metal dies aren’t cost-effective. Several laminator suppliers promote this in the UK.

The results may not be as sharp as metal dies or the expensive inkjet foilers, but the entry costs are very low indeed, especially as the machines still work for conventional lamination, as with D&K’s range which foils up to B2. The Korean manufacturer GMP pioneered laminators with foiling facilities and sells three via GMP UK, a part of Gardiner Graphics. Intec Printing Systems – recently bought by Plockmatic and now sold alongside Morgana in the UK – bases its pair of ColorFlare foil laminators on GMP hardware: the CF350 costs £1999 and the CF1200 starts from £7999.

It also sells compatible foils, which were recently extended with a fashionable rose gold colour, plus copper and a useful opaque white. Vivid Lamination also offers a special Matrix Metallic version of its popular 420mm wide sheet-fed thermal laminator, for spot foils and gloss effects. This features modified rollers and a foil feeder. Other suppliers of laminator with foiling options include Autobond, Foliant (sold by IFS, using the retrofittable Multi-functional Imprinting Unit) and Komfi (sold by Friedheim). It was Caslon who pioneered the foil-onto-toner market in the 1980s, using dedicated heater-applicators rather than laminators. The company currently sells US-built FoilTech. machines, starting about £2000 for a 340mm wide manual feed model, up to a bit over £4000 for an auto-feed twin ribbon machine. A much more expensive but faster option is Kurz’s dedicated 4000sph B1 digital DM-Luxliner, which foils directly onto dry toner or HP Indigo prints.

Inkjets for ultimate effects

Inkjet-based embellishers have tended to get all the publicity ever since MGI announced JetVarnish, a digital spot UV varnisher, at drupa 2008 (though so did Komfi, but with less fanfare). At Ipex 2010 Scodix showed the first ‘high-build’ inkjet UV varnisher, with a raised and textured effect.

MGI soon followed with a high-build model called JetVarnish 3D. A few years later both worked out how to apply foil over the raised clear polymer. Scodix still offers more effects though, including faceted gems and Cast & Cure for high-end packaging. Scodix has gone through several generations and today has standardised on the Ultra 1000 series, with six models ranging in price from about £400,000 to £1.1 million. Most of them are B2 format, but with different front end configurations for commercial print, web-to-print and carton packaging.

Embellishment advances

Kurz offers high-end digital foiling options
supporting sheet sizes up to B1

There are two configurations for most applications. The base model uses a single polymer type, which VP global sales and marketing manager Mark Nixon says is suitable for ‘75% of all possible jobs.’ The other type has four polymer feeds, with different characteristics formulated between them to adhere to pretty well any substrate. The top model is the Ultra 6000, the only current B1 format offering, with a top speed of 1000sph. There was briefly a 4000sph B1 model, the E106, but the £2 million-plus price was too much for the market to bear. Mr Nixon says that users are happy with 1000 sph, as it compares favourably with high end analogue foiling systems that use metal dies and which can take hours to make ready. MGI today is in effect a subsidiary of Konica Minolta which as of October 202 held a 42.3% stake. KM sells the range worldwide, though not exclusively. Three models are B2 format, offering up to 4200sph, one is roll-to-roll on a 420mm web, and there is a long-A3 format model that was originally called JetVarnish 3D One, which was exclusive to KM even before it increased its shareholding in MGI.

This summer the MGI-badged One has been replaced by the Konica Minolta-branded AccurioShine 3600, which is apparently the same thing with a different colour scheme, though there may be technical differences we haven’t found out yet. MGI’s enormous B1 AlphaJet, which is now available after years of development and previews, can print full p The Konica Minolta-branded AccurioShine 3600 replaces the MGI JetVarnish 3D One colour and embellish with 3D polymer and foil inline at 1800sph. So far there’s only one user, ISRA, in France, announced this year. An official launch is due in October and will be reported in Digital Printer. At LabelExpo 2019, a prototype digital cutting and creasing unit was demonstrated that may find its way onto the AlphaJet too. Germany’s foil manufacturer Kurz recently acquired the Swiss Steinemann company, whose inkjet varnish and foiling systems it was already marketing as Digital Metal. These include the sheetfed B2 DM-Smartliner for 2D flat varnishing and overfoiling and the DM-Maxliner for raised and textured effects. There are also narrow web label models. Duplo’s B3 DuSense 810 is probably the entry level for 3D varnish effects.

Duplo is very resistant to giving prices, but the launch price in 2017 was reportedly £139,000. That’s a lot less than any of the current MGI or Scodix machines, though Konica Minolta’s AccurioShine 3600 may be in the same price league. DuSense can be fitted with optional inline foiling using the Bagel MiniLam lamination/foil unit. There is now also a B2 model, the DuSense 8000, launched in May 2022, which is offered in various configurations providing the spot UV, digital foiling or both, including a pre-treatment option for expanding the types of print that can be handled.

 

How to sell it

With embellishment systems becoming relatively common, at least as options, the challenge is now how to get the message out to the customers – designers, brands, even high street shops, who won’t order effects that they don’t realise exist. Xerox is well aware of this, says Kevin O’Donnell, and is making a big push to support help its users develop their markets for the embellishment options on their presses. Its Genesis Initiative is a multi-level set of free offerings that aim to build the market for what it calls ‘beyond CMYK.’ This includes helping printers to market embellishment effectively, and also to understand how to price it. There are also courses for designers to learn about embellishment, and how to use it and explain it to their customers too. Mr O’Donnell says ‘The key is not just the technology. More important is market engagement, and design skills. Every printer should be looking at the ‘plus’, over and above the norm. That’s not just embellishment, but anything you can do to stand out from the crowd, even if it’s just giving a box of doughnuts to new customers! ‘Embellishment might be priced for profitable value-added business, or it might equally be priced as a loss-leader to get new business,’ he says.

‘Some 90 – 95% of your business might always be CMYK, but if the embellishment brings in new customers, you’ve got a good chance of retaining them for future CMYK work.’ Another separate initiative is what’s probably the first consultancy intended specifically at helping creatives and producers get the best out of digital embellishment. Taktiful in California has been set up by Kevin Abergel, who worked for many years for MGI. He was most recently sales director for North America, but that office closed when Konica Minolta took on sales and distribution.

He’s now established a network of consultants with practical experience of digital embellishment in North America, and is looking to expand his services into Europe and the UK soon. He’s not confining his work to MGI/Konica Minolta based systems, but across the whole range of processes and manufacturers. He says that digital embellishment systems aren’t being sold enough to customers, especially the built-in fifth units on digital presses. ‘People aren’t selling it correctly, they aren’t necessarily understanding how to pitch it or how to teach their clients how to design for it. A lot of the clients we work with at Taktiful have a fifth colour and say, ‘Yeah, I never use it. It’s just sitting there’, or ‘I’ve had this machine for two years. Maybe I’ve run 10 jobs on it’.

Overall, you ask them what percentage of jobs are they actually using it on. Typically they say less than four or five per cent. It’s a nice-to-have, but right now it’s not a need to-have because they’re not actually putting in a lot of the marketing effort needed to be able to take that off the ground. ‘But then we see some small mom and pop companies, little three, four-person shops, and embellishment is all they talk about. They go around, they talk to every restaurant, every little trophy shop or every little shoe store. They talk about how great the print could look. They say, ‘You could put in this fluorescent green on your next mailing, or let’s put in some dimensional on your menu so that you can actually feel the wood grain’. These are the people who get it and they’re the ones that are making it work for them.’

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Vivid and Xeretec show digital foiling on uncoated papers https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/75842/vivid-and-xeretec-show-digital-foiling-on-uncoated-papers/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/75842/vivid-and-xeretec-show-digital-foiling-on-uncoated-papers/#respond Mon, 17 Oct 2022 11:08:23 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=75842 Xerox used its recent Xeretec Ltd Xerox Print Show event in Uxbridge to highlight some state-of-the-art print and packaging ideas involving Vivid Laminating Technologies, XMPie and Xerox.

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Xerox used its recent Xeretec Ltd Xerox Print Show event in Uxbridge to highlight some state-of-the-art print and packaging ideas involving Vivid Laminating Technologies, XMPie and Xerox.

Lewis Evans, sales and product manager at Vivid provided a demonstration launching scratch-off foil technology to increase personalisation, claimed to be the first in digital print.

Mr Evans said, ‘We designed the [foiling] machine with a silicone roller instead of steel, as the silicone roller can push the foil into the uncoated paper stock. It can print onto coated, uncoated and on top of laminated stock too. It is unusual and new to digital foil on uncoated paper. It has never been done in digital print before.’

Phil Gaskin, business development channel manager at XMPie, delved into recent trends and claimed 11% of companies generated at least 50% of their income via a web-to-print platform. He also said 83% of consumers are willing to share their data to create a more personalised experience.

Mr Gaskin said, ‘I believe if you can print it, you can personalise it. During the pandemic we had one customer who deployed many stores as once things opened up again he had a lot of volume. He now has 20 stores with an average order of 300 line items, all completely automated in a touchless workflow MIS. He is one of three printers who said that if it wasn’t for XMPie, he wouldn’t be in business right now.

John Howlett, a pre-sales analyst at Xerox, gave a live demonstration on the Xerox Iridesse production press, explaining in detail how the fluorescent pink toner introduced in the last couple of years can be mixed with the other colours supported in the six-colour machine ‘to create a whole raft of new colours that aren’t already out there in the colour market’.

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KM and MGI launch AlphaJet B1 print-and-embellish press https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/75821/km-and-mgi-launch-alphajet-b1-print-and-embellish-press/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/75821/km-and-mgi-launch-alphajet-b1-print-and-embellish-press/#respond Fri, 14 Oct 2022 09:52:41 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=75821 MGI has launched the AlphaJet B1 single-pass digital printing and embellishment press, aiming at both commercial and packaging applications

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After a decade in development, MGI has launched the AlphaJet B1 digital printing and embellishment press, aiming at both commercial and packaging applications for the single-pass digital CMYK print, UV varnish and foil machine.

Previously slated for launch at drupa 2020, the €3 million press combines what have previously been separate print and finishing processes into one, saving on both floorspace and staffing, requiring only a single operator, according to MGI co-founder, executive vice-president and managing director Victor Abergel, who discussed the AlphaJet’s genesis and gestation in some detail prior to a live production demonstration at Konica Minolta’s Industrial Digital Printing facility in Paris.

Described by MGI as ‘a single-pass Factory 4.0’, the AlphaJet uses 1600 x 1600dpi Memjet printheads and MGI/KM’s own aqueous inks and UV-curable varnish, plus a variety of foils, including holographic and cast-and-cure types, to offer a full production of dry and finishing-ready embellished sheets at the rate of 1800 simplex sheets per hour. Media support ranges from 135gsm paper to 2000-micron board and some synthetic and metallised types are supported, though may need priming first for ink adhesion.

The CMYK inks are said to cover 80% of the Pantone range and to be Fogra-certified within this. At the moment there are no firm plans to increase the number of inks, though Mr Abergel told Digital Printer that any such move would most likely see the addition of two further primary colours, such as green and blue, to optimise gamut expansion, rather than just the addition of a fifth colour.

The UV ‘varnish’ options include flood (with satin or gloss finish options), spot, ‘tactile’ (2D) and textural (3D, up to a maximum build height of 200 microns), all of which can be mixed within a sheet as desired, subject to suitable layer information being available in the artwork PDF. Foiling will then follow the contours of the UV.

Registration accuracy was a key design goal for the AlphaJet. Eschewing cylindrical designs and belt transports, the press uses flatbed imaging on trays that effectively float and are moved via electromagnetic repulsion, removing pretty well all possible sources of friction. Vibration is further minimised by mounting the print section on a 4.5 tonne granite block. The whole press weighs 20 tonnes, and including 4000-sheet input and output stackers, occupies 150sqm in a looped configuration, but requires 200sqm for all-round access and paper loading/removal.

Press control is via a three-screen ‘flight deck’ which combines operational dashboard displays for overall equipment efficiency (OEE) with production status and 3D rendering software that enables print items to be previewed, shared and approved remotely for production, including modelling the visual effects of embellishment. The Cloud-based software also allows remote monitoring and even production control via tablet. Stock profiles can be set up and loaded to facilitate job changes, a process that was said to take two or three minutes, including loading of the material.

Sustainability also figured in MGI’s design deliberations. In addition to claiming a 30% smaller energy requirement and a 60% reduction in overall carbon footprint compared to separate print and embellishment processes, Mr Abergel confirmed that the inks, UV varnish and foils used in the AlphaJet are all de-inkable according to Ingede criteria, meaning that AlphaJet print should be fully recyclable along with most analogue print types. Perhaps equally important is the argument that by using the UV flood coating, which can be a thin as three microns, plastic lamination can be avoided entirely, which Mr Abergel said had attracted considerable interest from packaging printers working for luxury brand owners looking to improve their environmental credentials.

In terms of applications, the combined print and embellishment combined with the B1 format and substrate range is a natural fit for high quality shorter-run cartons and Mr Abergel told Digital Printer  that at least one large European analogue packaging printer is considering the machine and has set up a ‘secret’ digital department to evaluate it and understand the workflow required.

On the commercial side the case is perhaps less immediately clear, but Mr Abergel gave the example of a loyalty cards printed by first AlphaJet customer ISRA, for whom the ability to go plastic-free had been a major attraction. High quality business cards and personalised high-end marketing materials are other possibilities, as are some industrial applications, including printed electronics. Mr Abergel also pointed out that the machine can embellish-only and thus could handle offset printed sheets with equal facility.

The AlphaJet is available to order now and a second demonstration centre is to be opened at Konica Minolta’s New York, USA facility.

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Duplo shows B2 options at open house https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/73517/duplo-shows-b2-options-at-open-house/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/73517/duplo-shows-b2-options-at-open-house/#respond Fri, 20 May 2022 10:55:39 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=73517 Duplo has introduced a B2+ version of the DuSense digital UV coater/foiler, and a B2 cutting system that cuts down sheets for further cutting, creasing and perforation in an existing multi-finisher.

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Duplo has introduced two devices aimed at B2 digital printing, a B2+ version of the DuSense digital UV coater/foiler, and a cutting system that cuts down the larger sheets for further cutting, creasing and perforation in an existing multi-finisher.

The two machines were launched and demonstrated at an open house event held at the company’s Addlestone, Surrey showrooms, to an audience of dealers, distributors and customers, the first such event Duplo has been able to hold since before the Covid pandemic.

The DuSense DDC-8000 is a modular B2+ unit, able to handle sheets up to 585 x 1068mm, with a maximum ‘print’ area of 538 x 1048mm, a sheet size that prefigures forthcoming digital presses, according to Duplo. It is offered in four configurations, from Essential, which offers the digital spot UV coating at 600 x 600dpi, through a Foil variant which offers the digital foiling capability and a Pro version which adds media pretreatment to allow use with offset, dry toner and HP Indigo prints, to an Ultimate specification which includes everything. The length of the unit ranges from 5.2m in the Essential guise up to 6.6m in Ultimate form.

Substrates between 160 and 600gsm can be handled, allowing applications in folding cartons and related packaging. Auto Thickness Detection adjusts both printhead height and foiling roller pressure. The UV coating can be applied in thicknesses between 10 and 80 microns in a single pass, though product specialist Andy Cuff advised that most applications are in the 30 – 40 micron range and for thicker builds, a two-pass process would give better control for finely detailed work. Mercury lamp UV curing allows a maximum throughput of 1500sph.

Registration along the entire length of the sheet is achieved via a side-lay system and a camera is used to detect X-Y offset, stretch, skew or twist (shear) issues with the incoming printed sheet. The system also includes a barcode reader for variable data work, enabling different UV/foiling instructions to be called as each new job arrives. Up to five foil cores can be supported, allowing different colours or types of foil to be applied across the width of the sheet if desired; foil roll changes can be accomplished in around one minute, comparable to laminator systems.

The DC-20K cutting system cuts B2+ sheets into sizes that can be handled via the existing Duplo DC-746 slitter/cutter/creaser,  to which it is linked inline via a feeder, which Duplo points out will maximise existing customers’ investment in the latter while enabling printers who are moving into B2 digital print in order to increase volumes or to replace more offset work to gain the benefits of the format without having to upgrade or replace all their SRA3 equipment.

Four applications were demonstrated, from standard business cards, where the B2 sheet size allows for 50% greater coverage at 64 per sheet versus 21 per sheet on SRA3, while 150mm square greetings cards also benefit from a better fit on the sheet and demonstrated the DC-20K’s ability to handle long or short edge feeding. An A4 landscape job with creasing and perforation along both axes was shown, and a nine-up A6 leaflet layout with off-centred cutting also demonstrated the productivity advantage of the B2 sheet size, though requiring the appropriate imposition for this type of finishing.

To this end, communication with EFI Fiery DFEs and Ultimate Technologies’ Impostrip are being developed. This is achieved via ‘lightweight’ XML code which is quick to process, and follows on from previous Duplo integrations with EFI front-ends, for its DC-648 and DC-616 units.

The DDC-8000 is available immediately and the DC-20K is expected to ship in summer 2022.

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Canon confirms Scodix compatibility for inkjet embellishment https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/63951/canon-confirms-scodix-compatibility-for-inkjet-embellishment/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/63951/canon-confirms-scodix-compatibility-for-inkjet-embellishment/#respond Thu, 18 Feb 2021 11:25:56 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=63951 Canon has confirmed the compatibility of its VarioPrint iX cut-sheet inkjet presses with five of the options supported by Scodix digital embellishment

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Canon has confirmed the compatibility of its water-based VarioPrint iX ink technology and the polymer used in Scodix digital embellishment presses, allowing users of the VarioPrint iX and i-series inkjet presses to take advantage of five of the enhancement options offered, in order to tackle new applications and increase margins.

VarioPrint iX-series and i-series users can use any of the Scodix Ultra range of  digital embellishment presses to apply the latter’s Sense, Foil, Glitter, VDE and Cast & Cure effects. Sense adds raised glossy ’embossed’ textures, while Foil and Glitter are self-explanatory; VDE is a variable data embellishment capability that complements the Canon presses’ ability to produce every-page-different output, while Cast & Cure enables 3D holographic effects to be achieved. Canon believes that these possibilities will also tempt existing Scodix owners who are considering a move to inkjet print and notes that its ColorGrip primer allows its cut-sheet inkjets to print on a wide range of media.

Hayco van Gaal, vice president Sales and Service, Commercial Printing EMEA at Canon Europe, commented, ‘This technological compatibility between Canon’s VarioPrint iX ink and Scodix PolySense 500 polymer gives commercial printers scope to add value and help brands differentiate their print applications with additional effects. We are constantly on the lookout for ways to enable our customers to inject further creativity into their campaigns, broaden their application portfolio and increase revenue. Using Scodix’s print embellishments, our customers can elevate the value of their products and increase the efficiency of their workflows.’

Canon’s first VarioPrint iX customer, Kampert Nauta managing director Richard Kampert said, ‘Having been the first commercial and online print operation in the world to invest in the VarioPrint iX-series, we were taken aback by its ability to achieve offset-like print quality on a variety of thicker media, essential for producing greeting cards, which is one of our core applications.  We’ve since invested in a Scodix Ultra press allowing us to streamline our workflow with this additional near-line embellishment potential. With the combination of both presses at our disposal, we’ve been able to decrease our turnaround times, produce smaller print runs more cost effectively, as well as enlarge and enhance our product portfolio. We can now respond quickly to the needs of our customers and produce print products that stand out from the crowd.’

Scodix Ultra embellishment presses are supplied and supported exclusively in the UK and Ireland by Friedheim International.

 

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Konica Minolta increases stake in MGI https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/61521/konica-minolta-increases-stake-in-mgi/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/61521/konica-minolta-increases-stake-in-mgi/#respond Fri, 09 Oct 2020 11:03:41 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=61521 Konica Minolta has increased its stake in French embellishment press manufacturer MGI to 42.3%.

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Reflecting the growing importance of digital print finishing in commercial, decor and packaging print, Konica Minolta has increased its stake in French embellishment press manufacturer MGI to 42.3%.

A statement from Konica Minolta said that over the past four years its industrial printing business has approximately doubled in size. During the Covid-19 pandemic, demand has temporarily stagnated in some areas of the industrial printing sector. Over the medium to long term, however, the company believes that demand for industrial printing will shift more to on-demand than ever before, and that the shift from analogue to digital printing will increasingly accelerate in order to respond to this change in demand.

The company added that ‘digitisation of post-processing will become increasingly important. Particularly, it is essential to expand the line-up of digital embellishment machines that make printed materials more appealing, and it is crucial for Konica Minolta to deepen the alliance with MGI, the first company in the world to commercialise digital embellishment printing machines.’

The move follows an expanded cooperation agreement announced in July of this year, which built on KM’s original 2014 ‘equity and business alliance’ with MGI and a 2016 expansion of KM’s stake in MGI to 40.5%. Applications are foreseen particularly in labels and packaging, where MGI’s capabilities for digital spot UV and foiling are complementary to KM’s line of narrow web label presses, but are also applicable to its line of cut-sheet SRA3 toner presses and the B2 KM-1e inkjet press.

Konica Minolta also referenced the Alphajet, an all-in-one B1 print and embellishment press, presented as a technology showcase at drupa 2016, saying that it will launch ‘the ultimate digital system that can automatically complete all of the pre-process, printing and post-process to the final product’ – but not when. The Alphajet had been anticipated at drupa 2020 but KM has pulled out of drupa 2021.

Founded in 1982, MGI is based in Fresnes, France, has 204 employees and posted €68.17 million revenues for 2019.

 

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Route 1 throws open doors on Landa and MGI investments https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/55704/route-1-throws-open-doors-on-landa-and-mgi-investments/ https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/news/55704/route-1-throws-open-doors-on-landa-and-mgi-investments/#respond Fri, 07 Feb 2020 10:47:58 +0000 https://www.digitalprintermag.co.uk/?post_type=news&p=55704 Route 1 Print held a series of open days to demonstrate its Landa S10P B1 nanographic press and its MGI JETvarnish 3D Evo 75 embellishment press

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Trade printer Route 1 Print held a series of open days this week at its South Yorkshire site to demonstrate its Landa S10P B1 nanographic press and its MGI JETvarnish 3D Evo 75, amongst its armada of digital and offset print equipment.

Running from 4 – 6 February, the open days saw a range of Route 1 trade customers and Landa guests visit the factory at Wath upon Dearne, where head of Route 1 Mark Young told them ‘our factory is your factory’, and together with other parent group Bluetree and Route 1 staff explained the company’s approach to helping its customers grow their businesses. This includes offering an API to integrate online ordering directly from customer websites, including those based on WordPress, into Route 1’s production systems. 

The demonstration of the Landa press was the part that interested attendees most. On the day that Digital Printer attended, it featured jobs prepared by Landa rather than work for Route 1 customers, though Route 1 confirmed that the press was already producing paid work. The samples showed a wide colour gamut even in CMYK-only mode, which is how Route 1 has its machine configured, so that work will match across all its press types. Samples of what is achievable using the seven-colour configuration (which adds green, orange and blue inks) were also shown separately, along with a explanation of the nanographic printing process.

Head of Route 1 production development Lewis Rogal said that the press had been running at its rated speed of 6500 sheets per hour (simplex, duplex throughput is half that) and faster; a forthcoming speed hike to 10,200sph was mentioned by the Landa demonstrator, as was on-the-fly correction for quality drift.

According to product and pricing specialist Jack Crofts, the B1 MGI embellishment press brings a great improvement – 20 times the capacity – to the firm’s digital ‘spot UV’ capability, while the foiling made possible by the iFoil L component of the embellishment system will be launched over the next few months. The unit’s camera system that provides image-based registration was a key factor in its selection.

A report on the open day will appear in the March 2020 issue of Digital Printer.

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