motormount
Well-known member
Hi all,
It's been a while since i last posted, or even visited the forum.
I 've got a couple of questions and i really hope to have your insight here.
We are trying to reconfigure the production workflow, in a midsize plant.
We do offset, digital, some wide format, bindery ( except sewn books ), lamination, uv, hot foils, die cutting, almost everything a commercial printshop might do.
With a lot of problems.
So starting from the job tickets, do you use a single job ticket for print and bindery?
We print one, which follows the job throughout production circle, but:
People get confused with all the info and at the end of the day don't read it at all.
Parts of a job are printing while others are in bindery, or in different stages of bindery etc.
Printing double tickets gets things more confused, those who do the folding for example don't know how many sheets have been printed hope you get the picture.
How do you manage?
Another one :
Do you print mock ups for every job?
For an 80 pages A4 sewn book, would you need to print a mock up to check the imposition, bleeds etc or you simply rely on your prepress checks?
Is the mock up color accurate so the printer can trust it, or do you print a separate proof?
Or - depending on the job - no proof at all?
- talking about offset runs -
I personally believe that each job - even the most simple - should go to the printer, with some kind of hard proof.
Last one - for today -
Does your printers check the job ticket numbers, or print just as written?
For example we want 10000 A4 leaflets, we need 1250 8up sheets, but the job tickets mistakenly writes to print 2500 sheets, do you believe that the printer should check the numbers before starts printing?
Or fold the first page of a flat to check if it's matches the mock up given?
Thanks in advance!
It's been a while since i last posted, or even visited the forum.
I 've got a couple of questions and i really hope to have your insight here.
We are trying to reconfigure the production workflow, in a midsize plant.
We do offset, digital, some wide format, bindery ( except sewn books ), lamination, uv, hot foils, die cutting, almost everything a commercial printshop might do.
With a lot of problems.
So starting from the job tickets, do you use a single job ticket for print and bindery?
We print one, which follows the job throughout production circle, but:
People get confused with all the info and at the end of the day don't read it at all.
Parts of a job are printing while others are in bindery, or in different stages of bindery etc.
Printing double tickets gets things more confused, those who do the folding for example don't know how many sheets have been printed hope you get the picture.
How do you manage?
Another one :
Do you print mock ups for every job?
For an 80 pages A4 sewn book, would you need to print a mock up to check the imposition, bleeds etc or you simply rely on your prepress checks?
Is the mock up color accurate so the printer can trust it, or do you print a separate proof?
Or - depending on the job - no proof at all?
- talking about offset runs -
I personally believe that each job - even the most simple - should go to the printer, with some kind of hard proof.
Last one - for today -
Does your printers check the job ticket numbers, or print just as written?
For example we want 10000 A4 leaflets, we need 1250 8up sheets, but the job tickets mistakenly writes to print 2500 sheets, do you believe that the printer should check the numbers before starts printing?
Or fold the first page of a flat to check if it's matches the mock up given?
Thanks in advance!