We have recently put on an apprentice, and rather than have him sweeping the floor and doing the bins all day (seriously, those jobs CAN be done in 10mins!!) we have had him actually printing on an old GTO46 (with appropriate supervision of course) and assisting with loading on the 40" and 26" presses. So far he has been with us for a few months and seems to be enjoying himself, and is doing very well at learning the operation of each of our presses, and more importantly, is learning to print.
In the last month he spent 3 weeks of it at tech, learning the more technical detalis involved in printing and getting a good grounding in the theory behind printing. One thing that has thoroughly annoyed me however, is the attitude he has copped from fellow trainees at tech. most of these kids are juniors on larger, modern multi-colour presses, and tend to look down their noses at him, one even having the hide to ask what a GTO is!!! From what i can gather, they have very little knowledge of printing, but can make ready a fully auto press in 10 mins!!!
There is a fair chance that the only time some of these trainees will actually see an ink key is at tech, and i fear that this generation of printers will be well and truly stumped if something goes wrong with the auto set up systems on their presses. Unless they go to the sub-continent perhaps
I just hope that they get a good grounding and are working with printers who are not jelous of their knowledge, and learn more about the things that can go wrong and how to fix them, rather than how to push some buttons and hope manfully that it all works. My thoughts are that the the true art of printing, and the satisfaction of getting a difficult job j-u-s-t right, is being lost to the march of technology. However, in this day and age, putting your head in the sand and crying about the old days wont get your job done. The technology of today is taking the art out of printing.... but competition waits for no-one!!
In the last month he spent 3 weeks of it at tech, learning the more technical detalis involved in printing and getting a good grounding in the theory behind printing. One thing that has thoroughly annoyed me however, is the attitude he has copped from fellow trainees at tech. most of these kids are juniors on larger, modern multi-colour presses, and tend to look down their noses at him, one even having the hide to ask what a GTO is!!! From what i can gather, they have very little knowledge of printing, but can make ready a fully auto press in 10 mins!!!
There is a fair chance that the only time some of these trainees will actually see an ink key is at tech, and i fear that this generation of printers will be well and truly stumped if something goes wrong with the auto set up systems on their presses. Unless they go to the sub-continent perhaps
I just hope that they get a good grounding and are working with printers who are not jelous of their knowledge, and learn more about the things that can go wrong and how to fix them, rather than how to push some buttons and hope manfully that it all works. My thoughts are that the the true art of printing, and the satisfaction of getting a difficult job j-u-s-t right, is being lost to the march of technology. However, in this day and age, putting your head in the sand and crying about the old days wont get your job done. The technology of today is taking the art out of printing.... but competition waits for no-one!!