The drupa Year 2004 Marks the 100th Anniversary of Offset
Printing.
To commemorate this event, Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
(Heidelberg) has produced some background information for
journalists in brochure form. This describes how trend researchers,
technical specialists and operators see the present and future of
this technology.
Print products are such a natural part of our lives that we
don't even think about them. From the moment we get up in the
morning, we're encountering print products - from the newspaper
to the label on the orange juice bottle, the coffee packaging to
the paper money we use to pay for the sports magazine. At the
office we use forms, manuals and dictionaries. At the shops, it is
the packaging that tells us what's inside - cornflakes or
catfood. In the restaurant, the menu tells us what is on offer for
us to eat. And in the evening at home, what would TV be like
without a TV magazine? Everyone can afford print products, they
don't need any electricity, they are easy to use and what's
more… the vast majority of today's print products are
manufactured with offset technology.
Offset printing is alive and well …
Gutenberg's letterpress printing had already been in
existence for over 300 years when the playwright Senefelder, who
wanted to duplicate sheets of music, first developed lithography in
1798. This was the forerunner of modern offset printing. In 1904,
two researchers independently of each other developed a technique
for indirectly applying (offsetting) ink onto paper via a
rubber-covered impression cylinder. For a long time, both processes
existed alongside each other. It was only in the 1960s that offset
printing with its photo-chemical prepress processes finally took
over from letterpress printing with its hot metal composition. It
was faster, better and more cost-effective and this proved to be a
winning formula.
Is a classical technology like offset printing also
future-proof for the digital age? Print shops intensively
rationalize their workflows using computer technology. This is true
not only of the prepress workflow with its desktop publishing and
Computer-to-Plate. A modern press is bristling with electronics.
The workflow in the production line is combined with business
management to produce a data and material flow.
The goal is a networked media house according to the
principle of "single source - multimedia". Different
applications - brochures, mailshots, websites or CD-ROMs - are
generated from a single stock of data. "Print is an important
medium in the communication age, but it's just one of
many," says Carl Michael Nägele, Managing Director of
Georg Kohl in Brackenheim: "Georg Kohl sees itself as a system
provider for the information processing sector. We receive data
from all over the world and process it for our customers. Without
offset printing, we simply wouldn't be able to do this. But
it's just as likely we might be producing a CD-ROM, a product
for the Internet or a fax."
... and ready for the digital age
Printing in general, and offset printing in particular, will
continue to be used in the future. As long as offset technology
remains the best and most cost-effective method, there is no viable
alternative for the vast majority of print products. "As
things currently stand, offset printing is ideally placed to
provide printers with the best possible opportunities for quality
and cost-effectiveness in the future," says Dr. Wilfried
Schäfer, Managing Director of the German Association of
Printing and Paper Technology, part of the German Federation of the
Engineering Industries. "The drupa 2004 trade show will be the
ideal platform for identifying developments and trends," he
adds.
There will probably be a shift of emphasis. Electronic media
are increasingly being used for up-to-the-minute reporting, and
even for gossip and scandal. Electronic marketplaces are appearing.
This used to take place behind closed doors. Now it can be done
over any distance via cellphones and chatrooms. And half of the
network generation obtain their information from the digital media.
"However, a new medium has never replaced an old one.
The tendency is rather for the new to assign the old a new
place," says Hamburg trend researcher and communication expert
Prof. Peter Wippermann, explaining the role of print media in the
digital age.
"Single source - multimedia" also applies to the
publication "100 Years of Offset Printing". It is also
available in digital form as a PDF or as an open text document with
image data for further processing.
Image:
Heidelberg has produced a brochure for journalists entitled
"100 Years of Offset Printing". It describes how trend
researchers, technical specialists and operators see the present
and future of this technology.
For further information and printed brochures:
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Corporate Communications
Hilde Weisser
Tel.: +49 (0)6221 92 50 66
Fax: +49 (0)6221 92 50 46
E-mail:
hilde.weisser@heidelberg.com