Tuesday, December 4, 2007

HOW TO MAKE WHATEVER YOU PRINT LOOK SHARP, GET NOTICED AND READ!

HOW TO MAKE WHATEVER YOU PRINT LOOK

SHARP, GET NOTICED AND READ!

Getting high quality printing takes more than finding a good printer.

You have to know the rules of the game or the results will be less

then professional. Regardless if you're using the corner drugstore's

copy machine to run off a few copies on the spot, or paying big

bucks to a printer in a distant city for a full blown catalog, everything

starts with the material provided. The camera truly sees everything,

so be careful to always provide crisp, uncontaminated originals or

you will be disappointed with the results.

TIPS TO PRODUCE GOOD ORIGINALS

If you want quality printing, always submit your material on a

good grade of white paper, regardless of what final color your

material is to be printed on.

Whenever possible, have your printer work from an original

document. If that's not possible it should be nothing more than a first

generation copy. Anything else will give poor results

If you're using a computer, final output should be printed on a

Laser printer with a resolution of at least 300 dots per inch. 600

DPI, or 800 DPl is noticeably better. In a pinch, Ink Jet printers

produce reasonably good output, but stay away from any dot matrix

printers that produce ragged text and terrible graphics t hat will only

be magnified when reproduced by your printer or copy machine.

To stand out from the crowd, consider having your masters

printed on a ultra-high resolution printer found at many service

bureaus in major cities. Typical resolutions start at 1,200 DPI.

This is especially important if you employ graphics, photographs,

or complex shading patterns. The cost is around fifteen dollars a

page.

If you're still using a typewriter, be sure it's an electric model

equipped with a high quality carbon ribbon.

Never try and erase from the original. No matter how careful you

are, the printer's camera can pick up the deterioration in the paper,

make the blemish more noticeable and highlight the very error

you're trying to hide.

The same applies to typewriter ribbons that "type over

mistakes," the camera will pick it up.

If you must "correct" and are unwilling to redo your work, use a

very small amount of one of the many liquid correction fluids. Be

sure to match the color of the correction fluid to the paper and let it

dry thoroughly.

Avoid using paper clips or folding. Each will put creases in the

paper. No staples either, which leave tiny holes that will reproduce

as black dots. No masking or cellophane tape which also leave tell-

tale marks.

Never use a pencil or marking pens. Neither reproduce evenly or

provide enough contrast.

Signatures should be made in black ink, being sure you apply

steady pressure throughout.

If you want to have a photograph reproduced you need to have it

"screened" first. While most quick-print shop can provide this

service, you probably can have it done cheaper at your local

newspaper office.

WHICH IS BEST, PHOTOCOPYING OR OFFSET PRINTING?

Finding the "right" printer depends on the job you're having done.

Most Quick Print Shops found in the major metropolitan areas do

reasonably good work but are usually expensive. The main

advantage is speed. If you have to have something right away

expect to pay a premium price. If you can wait an average of a

week to ten days you can find many mail order printers that do very

good work at a fraction of the price of your neighborhood printer

charges. Like anything else it pays to shop around. Prices and

quality of work varies considerably.

One alternative to offset printing is high quality photocopying.

Several national franchises and many retail chain provide excellent

work. The key is what type of equipment is available. The typical

"pay as you copy" machines that you must feed an endless supply

of coins are not suited to running more than a few copies at a time.

To get quality and reasonable price I'm talking about expensive full

size machines that can copy a two-sided document in one pass

anywhere from 50 to 200 copies per minute. If well maintained, the

output is excellent and hard to distinguish from offset printing. Your

cost should be in the area of four to eight cents a page, which can

be a bargain if your need around a hundred copies or so.

If you need more than a few hundred copies, offset printing is

cheaper especially in higher quantities. The best way to save is

plan ahead. The printer's biggest cost isn't paper or ink which they

buy truck loads of at a time, it's labor expense creating, lugging and

setting-up the plates in the printing press. So don't have a thousand

circulars printed up and come back a month later to repeat the

process. You can almost always get a much better price by ordering

a six month or greater supply and have them printed all at once.

PAPER AND INK

Color paper is far cheaper then colored ink for the same labor

intensive reasons, and works just as well at getting attention. Good

choices for sales letters and proposals are off-white, buff and

cream. Letterheads look best on a heavy paper. Black ink on a soft

yellow or medium pink are very effective choices for circulars and

price lists. Lighter shades green, gray and lilac also work well for

most sales materials.

Harsh color combinations like black ink on red paper should be

restricted to large type of a few words only, due to being very hard

on the reader's eyes. Reverses (white type set on large black

backgrounds) should be limited to small sections like headlines or

an attention getting box for the same reason.

Some advertisers have had good success with the newer

fluorescent colored papers. While very harsh, they're also bright

which gives the necessary contrast to make them work. Because

any material printed on this type of paper can overpowering, keep

your wording to a minimum and stay away from small text.

ADDITIONAL TIPS TO MAKE YOUR WORK STAND OUT

No matter how good the final product, its of no value if it doesn't get

read. Chose your words carefully. Eliminate worn-out over used

words and phrases that serve no purpose. Make every word count.

Graphics and any art work should tie-in and complement the words

- never detract or confuse.

The importance of white space can not be over emphasized. Never

try and squeeze your work into too small an area. While half-inch

margins should be considered a minimum for an 8-1/2 x 11 paper,

three-quarter to one inch margins generally look better. Be sure to

break-up long blocks of text with Sub Heads. Not only do they make

whatever you wrote easier to read, it adds visual impact as well.

If you're using a computer don't be tempted to use every font you

have in your library. It comes across unprofessional and has the net

effect of actually making your work look sloppy and amateurish. For

any document you should have no more then three fonts. One for

any headline, one for sub-heads and another for the body. Instead

of changing fonts, add interest by using either bold or italics You

can also make your work look better by varying the size of

paragraphs, and indenting or changing the justification on certain

key sections. Bullets, borders, and shading in moderation also go a

long way to making what ever your writing look better The better

your work looks, the more likely it will be read!

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