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  2. Press check (printing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Press_check_(printing)

    While errors should be corrected during the Color Proofing and proofreading stages, the main purpose of a press check is to make sure that the color on press comes as close as possible to the color proof. Color proofs are valuable guides, but due to the inherent differences between color proofing techniques and printing itself, proofs will ...

  3. Galley proof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galley_proof

    Proof, in the typographical sense, is a term that dates to around 1600. [4] The primary goal of proofing is to create a tool for verification that the job is accurate separate from the pages produced on the press.

  4. Artist's proof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artist's_proof

    A proof of an etching by Hubert von Herkomer, without text, which would appear in the empty rectangular portion of the page above the artist's signature.. The term "proof" is generally, but not consistently, applied only to prints from the late eighteenth-century onwards, beginning with the English mezzotinters, who began the practice of issuing small editions of proofs for collectors, often ...

  5. Prepress proofing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prepress_proofing

    The proof is produced via color donors and thermal transfer (ablation) onto intermediate carriers or onto the substrate used for the print run. Both systems are imagesetter-like devices with which the image motifs can be reproduced in every detail including their color, screen definition, and screen angles .

  6. Proof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proof

    Artist's proof, a single print taken during the printmaking process; Galley proof, a preliminary version of a publication; Prepress proof, a facsimile of press artwork for job verification; Proof coinage, coins once made as a test, but now specially struck for collectors; Proof of concept, demonstration that a concept has practical potential

  7. Approval proofer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Approval_proofer

    Stochastic screening (or FM screening) can also be used to proof print runs with this screening technique. Being able to simulate screening effects with high fidelity makes it possible to detect undesirable screening artifacts (i.e. Moiré patterns ) before going to press, consequently saving customers time and money.

  8. Media Standard Print - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Standard_Print

    Media Standard Print 2016 – the English translation of the new German edition – was published in February 2017. Inter alia, it covers the switch to the new standard printing conditions for offset printing that were defined in 2013 and that for the first time take the effect of optical brighteners into account and so improve production quality.

  9. Counterproof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterproof

    In printmaking, a counterproof is a print taken off from another just printed, which, by being passed through the press, gives a copy in reverse, and of course in the same position as that of the plate from which the first was printed, the object being to enable the printmaker to inspect the state of the plate.