Digital or traditional printing?

Most of the times we overpaid for printing jobs.

This post is about how to choose one or another technology.

Traditional printing is used since the beginnings for reproduction at large scale of books, mostly religious at the very beginning. As traditional please read direct and offset prints.

This means industrial pieces like books, manuals, magazines, etc. made for massive reproduction.

Think on mugs for instance. Mugs are made at large scale. But if you want a mug for only one family, let’s say for Xmas gifts. Then you have to do it differently.

There is when digital is useful.

Digital can create at a very affordable cost not only one printing piece like a poster, can create also 50 business cards for an special event, like a wedding invitation.

Let’s put it like that: if you need less than 1000 business cards, you should choose digital printing technology.

Of course, this has limitations. Digital printing can’t produce special inks or finishes like foil. Yet.

You should be patient on that. Hopefully one day we can go as far as the industry standards go now, but in small quantities as digital.

Imagine 250 business cards in foil, with spot UV on a plastic frost finished at today’s digital printing cost!

Looks like the Eden of Graphic Designers but it will be possible one day.

In the meantime we keep an eye at Gutenberg’s invention and another eye on desktop publishing with their pros and cons.

Like almost everything we know so far.

Cheap business cards that bleed

Every time we need to send business cards to print, we have to make them bleed.

What is bleeding for printers?

Bleed is the safe area you provide for images that touch the borders. For example: if your design has an image that touch the border of the business cards, then that image has to be beyond the boundaries (usually about an eight of an inch is all you need) all around the piece.

This is because since production is not an exact science, everything is mobile: imagine the effect of 3 tons of pressure on a pile of paper. It tends to move, to accommodate, to slice in between each sheets. Once is compressed then is cutter. The final result is the exact look of the picture qith the border. But really the paper has been moved less than an eight but we are covered.