Examples of Offset Printing in the following topics:
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- Any subsequent prints made from the original plate are called "ghost prints".
- A print made by pressing a new print onto another surface, effectively making the print into a plate, is called a "cognate".
- The ink is finally transferred to a blank paper sheet when placed in a printing press, producing a printed page.
- The image can be printed directly from the plate in a direct press, which will cause the orientation of the image to be reversed, or it can be printed in an offset press, and the image from the stone will be transferred onto a flexible sheet of rubber, then printed onto paper without any change in its orientation.
- An example of a lithography stone and print.
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- The boom in the underground press was made practical by the availability of cheap offset printing, which made it possible to print a few thousand copies of a small tabloid paper for a few hundred dollars.
- Paper was cheap, and many printing firms around the country had over-expanded during the 1950s, leaving them with excess capacity on their offset web presses, which could be negotiated at bargain rates.
- Many of the papers faced official harassment on a regular basis; local police repeatedly raided offices, charged editors or writers with drug charges or obscenity, arrested street vendors, and pressured local printers not to print underground papers.
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- Retained earnings and losses are cumulative from year to year with losses offsetting earnings.
- Cash dividends (most common) are those paid out in currency, usually via electronic funds transfer or a printed paper check.
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- In screen printing, each color must be printed separately and needs a separate stencil and/or screen.
- Traditionally the process was called screen printing or silkscreen printing because silk was used in the process prior to the invention of polyester mesh.
- Screen printing is an efficient and popular way to print a wide array of materials.
- It is more versatile than traditional printing techniques as the surface does not have to be printed under pressure, like etching or lithography, and it does not have to be planar.
- As a result, screen printing is used in many different industries.
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- Gutenberg, a goldsmith by profession, developed a complete printing system, which perfected the printing process through all of its stages by adapting existing technologies to the printing purposes, as well as making groundbreaking inventions of his own.
- Because of the printing press, authorship became more meaningful and profitable.
- A demonstration of how to print on a Gutenberg printing press.
- Printing places showing the spread of incunabula printing in the 15th century. 271 locations are known, the largest of them are designated by name.
- The term incunabula referred to printed materials and came to denote the printed books themselves in the late 17th century.
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- Most developed country governments are prohibited by law from printing money directly, that function having been relegated to their central banks.
- Lending to a national government in the country's own sovereign currency is often considered "risk free" and is done at a so-called "risk-free interest rate. " This is because, up to a point, the debt and interest can be repaid by raising tax receipts (either by economic growth or raising tax rates), a reduction in spending, or failing that by simply printing more money.
- Lending to a national government in a currency other than its own does not give the same confidence in the ability to repay, but this may be offset by reducing the exchange rate risk to foreign lenders.
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