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Emergence of Flexo Printing: Transforming Print Technologies

Flexographic Printing has been widespread for decades. Examples include candy wrappers, refreshment bags, cereal boxes, plastic shampoo bottles, peel-able double-sided medication labels, notebooks, legal pads, desk calendars, and your seasonal roll of printed paper towels.

Almost everything that is printed today can be flexographically produced.

It may seem like magic, but the steps of Flexo Printing are best explained as a meticulously choreographed science that results in a beautiful and functional printed product.

Flexo Printing

Flexographic or flexo printing is a technique that transfers pigment onto a variety of substrates using heat and pressure. Due to its ability to print on a wide variety of substrates and its high level of detail, its prevalence has increased.

Unlike traditional lithographic printing, flexographic printing employs oil-based inks rather than water. This makes the process quicker and more efficient than lithography, which frequently requires days of curing time between steps.

In this article, you’ll learn about flexographic printing, its effective technique, and how to leverage its benefits for your business.

What Sets the Flexographic Printing Method Apart?

Flexographic printing employs a blanket, drum, or press to apply pigment to a flat surface. It is used in the printing industry due to its low cost and high-quality output. Flexography is used in various applications, including posters, labels, T-shirts, and packaging.

Flexography entails covering a surface with a malleable material (such as paper or plastic) and pressing it against a rigid surface (such as cardboard) in its most fundamental form. A roller or roller head is then applied to pressure the malleable surface, forcing the ink through the blanket onto the other surface.

Typically, flexography requires the following steps:

  • Ink application to a substrate
  • Utilizing force to press pigment through the substrate
  • The process of removing the substrate from the covering.
  • Ink transfer from the blanket to another surface
  • Repeat stages 1 through 4 until the desired result is attained.

Flexographic printing is the process of printing on a flexible surface, such as paper, with a combination of thin and dense lines. It is occasionally referred to as flexography, flexo lithography, or flex scope.

Flexography can also print on plastic, metal, and paper. For instance, flexible substrates can create large-scale posters and signs.

Flexographic Printing and Letterpress Printing

The only difference between flexographic printing and letterpress printing is using pigment instead of type. Both procedures qualify as typesetting. Because it shares many similarities with letterpress printing, flexography is often mistaken for a form of letterpress printing.

Nevertheless, flexography is a distinct technique that generates results that are only sometimes comparable to letterpress printing. While letterpress printing presses ink onto paper using weighty plates (or stereotype plates), flexography presses ink onto paper or plastic using light sheets (or placemats).

In both procedures, the image is transferred from the plate to the paper via impressions, which involve rubbing the plate back and forth over the paper.

Letterpress printing does this manually, while flexography does it mechanically (through rolling). In flexography, the ink is transmitted to the substrate using a roller that presses against the substrate and transfers ink with each pass.

Flexo printing Vs. Offset Printing

Offset and flexo printing use wet pigment and plates, but their techniques differ. Flexo prints directly from the plate to the substrate, whereas offset transfers the image from the plate to an intermediate carrier and then to the substrate. The choice between them is determined by the nature of the product, its quality, quantity, and substrate.

Plates

Flexo utilises flexible plates wrapped around a photopolymer cylinder. Each colour necessitates its plate. The image is printed directly onto the substrate, and adequately stored plates can be reused.

Offset printing utilises aluminium plates. Ink transfers via rollers onto the plate, then to a ‘blanket’, and lastly to the substrate.

Ink

Offset printing typically employs four ‘process’ colours (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) with corresponding stations. There are both water-based and UV-curable inks.

Recommended Read: Demystifying Small Format Wonders: Ignite Your Print Projects

Flexo printing can utilise process colours but typically has additional stations for spot colours. Inks can be solvent-based, water-based, or UV-curable. UV inks permit faster rates and can be left in the press, whereas water-based inks must be removed to avoid drying.

Components

Offset printing is utilised on smooth, flat materials such as paper, metal, and vinyl. It is ideally suited for newspapers, novels, and pamphlets. Additional processes, such as two-sided printing and die-cutting, are performed separately.

Flexo printing is primarily used for packaging various materials, including cellophane, foil, and fabric. Unlike offset, flexo printing can be applied to any flexible surface and frequently combines multiple processes to expedite production.

The Flexo-Printing Technique

Thousands of different varieties of flexographic printers are available, with the best being publicly available in the United Kingdom, Europe, and the United States. In Australia, with its rapidly growing printing industry, understanding the mechanism of flexo printing machines can equip you with the knowledge to comprehend others, given they all employ the same printing method. 

Each machine employs the same printing method, so you can comprehend the others if you are familiar with one flexo machine.

The essential components of the process are described below:

Making of plates

The printing plate, which contains the images and text to be printed in negative as a mirror image, is the most vital component of flexography. A distinct plate must be created for each color in the print run. Placemaking is a distinct art and science.

There have been three primary approaches historically:

Rubber Plates

The print image is first incised in negative onto a zinc or magnesium metal plate, then washed in an acid bath. On the plate, the image will appear in bas relief. The second step involves the creation of a plastic mold, which is then used to create the final printing plates from a thermoplastic, flexible polymer.

This is a costly and time-consuming method that is rarely employed today.

Photopolymer Plates

The print image is etched directly onto a light-sensitive polymer plate using ultraviolet light and a photo negative. When the polymer has hardened, it is rinsed out in a bath of water or solvent at approximately 40°C. This is still the most prevalent system of flexo plate production today.

Digital Plates

This cutting-edge technique employs a computer-controlled laser and a digital image to etch the printing plate. This eliminates the need for a photo negative and is currently the fastest-growing platemaking technique.

Discover More: How To Create an Effective Good Company Logo?

Conclusion

Flexographic printing is one of the most prevalent printing processes in use today. It is used for packaging, product labelling, and even currency printing.

Considering this, many people are curious about how to use this printing method to produce the highest quality prints feasible.

Flexographic printing is a terrific and cost-effective printing method that can be utilised for various purposes. This article has been an informative introduction to flexographic printing.

Here are a few more suggested reads from our blog,

  • Why You Should Use DTG Digital Printing | Printing Guide
  • Digital Printing vs Embroidery: Which Is the Right One for Your Workwear?
  • The Art of Overprint and Overprinting for Top-notch Designs
  • The Future of Garment Printing: Exploring DTF Technology

The post Emergence of Flexo Printing: Transforming Print Technologies first appeared on Garment Printing Blog.



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