To clean ink and fountain solutions from rollers, fountains, screens, and other press components.
Unusable paper or paper damage during normal makeready, printing or binding operations, as compared to spoilage.
Translucent logo in paper created during manufacturing by slight embossing from a dandy roll while paper is still approximately 90 percent water.
Split of the paper as it travels through a web press, causing operators to rethread the press.
Press that prints from rolls of paper, usually cutting it into sheets after printing. Also called reel-fed press. Web presses come in many sizes, the most common being mini, half, three quarter (also called 8-pages) and full (also called 16-pages).
(1) In a printed product, a die-cut hole revealing an image on the sheet behind it. (2) On a mechanical, an area that has been marked for placement of a piece of artwork.
Wire-O Binding is a mechanical binding which uses a series of double wire loops formed from a single continuous wire running along its length.
Side of the paper that rests against The Fourdrinier wire during papermaking, as compared to felt side.
Parallel to the grain direction of the paper being used, as compared to against the grain. See also Grain Direction.
An image that is backwards when compared to the original. Also called flopped and reverse reading.