Surface printing
Surface printing is an automated printing method. It first used in 1839. Most wallpaper was originally printed on surface printing machines. Surface printing machines are structured similarly to a ferris wheel, with a large central roller over which the paper travels; the individual ink rollers transfer an image to the paper on the main roller.
History
[edit]Surface printing was first used in 1839.[1] It is the oldest automated printing method still in use today.[2] Most wallpaper was originally printed on surface printing machines.[3]
Technique
[edit]Surface printing machines are structured similarly to a ferris wheel, with a large central roller that the paper travels over. Up to 12 individual ink rollers transfer an image to the paper on the main roller, laying down heavy amounts of ink.[4][5] Because the ink is pushed onto the paper, the images are not as crisp as the other methods.[citation needed] Also, there is no drying stage between laying down each color, so the order of color run-throughs is very important to keep the inks from running into each other.[citation needed] Because of the amount of ink required for impressions, and the inexact image rendering, surface printing has a very distinct look.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Entwisle, Eric Arthur (1964). Wallpapers of the Victorian Era. F. Lewis.[page needed]
- ^ Artifex. Oriel Press. 1969.[page needed]
- ^ Bisset, Donald E. (1984). The Printing Ink Manual. Van Nostrand Reinhold. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-442-30600-7.
- ^ Industry, Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper (1960). TAPPI Monograph Series. Technical association of the pulp and paper industry.[page needed]
- ^ Publications, Home Buyer (April–May 2001). "Old House Interiors". Home Buyer Publications. p. 49.