Hi All
We currently have the need to match Plastic Printed credit cards (Printed at a specialist card printer, not by us.) on our Litho Press. This is the workflow, we print the folder that the credit cards are delivered in. The Problem is the card always looks really dull, when we come to print the folder (the cards are printed first), the customer expects us to match the cards, so they look good when all in the same pack. We have to retouch down the folder to match the cards, which actually means the printed folder looks reall dull (as the cards)
......and before you ask, the customer will not print the cards after folder,
These are my questions
Is it possible for the credit card printer to match to ISO12647 (LAB and dot gains) ?, this would then match to our current targets
what type of ink is used and will it acheive ISO lab's ?
Is there another standard for plastic printing ?
The cards must be laminated after printing, does this effect the colour ?
I dont really understand this type of printing, so a background of the process would be a big help.
We currently have the need to match Plastic Printed credit cards (Printed at a specialist card printer, not by us.) on our Litho Press. This is the workflow, we print the folder that the credit cards are delivered in. The Problem is the card always looks really dull, when we come to print the folder (the cards are printed first), the customer expects us to match the cards, so they look good when all in the same pack. We have to retouch down the folder to match the cards, which actually means the printed folder looks reall dull (as the cards)
......and before you ask, the customer will not print the cards after folder,
These are my questions
Is it possible for the credit card printer to match to ISO12647 (LAB and dot gains) ?, this would then match to our current targets
what type of ink is used and will it acheive ISO lab's ?
Is there another standard for plastic printing ?
The cards must be laminated after printing, does this effect the colour ?
I dont really understand this type of printing, so a background of the process would be a big help.