Hello,
We direct-print on corrugated cardboard (kraft paper liner) in China for some of our packaging. We have moved to offset on white gloss paper which is then glued to corrugated for most products, but a few of our products are still in "brown" boxes with direct printing.
Our factory is incapable of communicating a printing process that makes any sense to me. I need to know what process they are using so that I can communicate it to others. They mention they use "rubber plates", and call it a watermark process (I think they might me mean water-base process?). Which printing process is this? I know Flexo uses rubber plates, is a water base process and can print on carboard. Is there any other process in the world that uses rubber plates, is water-based, and prints direct on corrugated cardboard? Or are they using flexo? Just want to know what they can be possibly doing.
We direct-print on corrugated cardboard (kraft paper liner) in China for some of our packaging. We have moved to offset on white gloss paper which is then glued to corrugated for most products, but a few of our products are still in "brown" boxes with direct printing.
Our factory is incapable of communicating a printing process that makes any sense to me. I need to know what process they are using so that I can communicate it to others. They mention they use "rubber plates", and call it a watermark process (I think they might me mean water-base process?). Which printing process is this? I know Flexo uses rubber plates, is a water base process and can print on carboard. Is there any other process in the world that uses rubber plates, is water-based, and prints direct on corrugated cardboard? Or are they using flexo? Just want to know what they can be possibly doing.