• Home
  • Article
    • Article Archive
    • Digital Archive
    • ENews Archive
  • Buyers Guide
    • Buyers Guide
    • 2025 Online Form
  • Advertising
    • Ad Options
    • Media Kit
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Electronic Files
  • Awards
    • FSEA Gold Leaf
  • Subscribe
  • Video Vault
  • Webinars
  • Amplify
  • Contact
  • Events
    .smi-preview#smi-preview-10580 { --smi-column-gap: 10px; --smi-row-gap: 20px; --smi-color: #ffffff; --smi-hover-color: #90c43c; ; ; --smi-border-width: 0px; ; --smi-border-radius: 0%; --smi-border-color: #3c434a; --smi-border-hover-color: #3c434a; --smi-padding-top: 15px; --smi-padding-right: 0px; --smi-padding-bottom: 0px; --smi-padding-left: 0px; --smi-font-size: 20px; --smi-horizontal-alignment: flex-end; --smi-hover-transition-time: 1s; ; }
    • Skip to main content
    • Skip to secondary menu
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Contact
    • Events
      PostPress

      PostPress

      Print Decorating, Binding and Finishing

      • Home
      • Articles
        • Article Archive
        • Digital Archive
        • ENews Archive
      • Advertising
        • Ad Options
        • Media Kit
        • Editorial Calendar
        • Electronic Files
      • Buyers Guide
        • Buyers Guide
        • 2025 Online Form
      • Awards
        • FSEA Gold Leaf
      • Subscribe
      • Video Vault
      • Webinars
        • Upcoming Webinars
      • Amplify

        Enews February 2023

        MBO America Introduces FC 23/30 Web Coating Unit

        February 13, 2023

        MBO America, Marlton, New Jersey, has boosted its portfolio with its FC web coating unit, available in 23-inch- and 30-inch-wide web widths.

        The unit applies aqueous (water-based) or UV-based (chemical-based) protective and tactile coatings to a printed web at full-press or finishing-web speed. It can coat two sides of the web with gloss, matte, soft-touch, satin and more. The company says the unit is well suited for the inkjet web market, advertising and direct mail.

        To learn more, visit www.mboamerica.com.

        Buying a Folder-Gluer: Top Three Factors to Consider

        December 13, 2022

        By Hani Hallal, Impack Packaging

        Looking to buy a folder-gluer machine? Because of the role a folder-gluer machine plays in the production of carton and corrugated boxes, the demand for folder-gluers is growing rapidly.

        That means choosing the right folder-gluer that fits a company’s needs and budget is critical. Failing to do so will not only cost the price of the folder-gluer, but also major long-term productivity and output losses.

        For the last two years, I’ve researched and interviewed some of the most experienced folder-gluer experts. Recently, I met with Mario Persechino, a folder-gluer expert and instructor with more than 40 years of experience in the industry, to talk about the most important factors to consider before buying a folder-gluer.

        This guide covers the top three factors Persechino said must be considered before buying a folder-gluer.

        Top three factors to consider

        Choosing the right folder-gluer depends on a multitude of factors that vary from company to company. However, there are three critical questions every folder-gluer owner needs to ask before buying a new folder-gluer:

        1. What are the company’s production needs?
        2. How will space be organized for the new folder-gluer?
        3. What post-purchase services are important to the company?

        1. What are the company’s production needs?

        A company’s needs always will be the biggest deciding factor influencing the right choice of folder-gluer model.

        Although all folder-gluers can produce the 300 different box formats that exist on the market, not all folder-gluers will be able to produce at the output, speed and budget a company requires.

        That is, every company’s needs are different and the choice of a folder-gluer rests on the knowledge of that.

        Most company needs can be broken down into two types: volume-based needs and format-based needs.

        Volume-based needs
        If a company’s primary focus is to produce the same types of boxes consistently every day, that would classify the company’s needs as volume-based.

        In this situation, it is recommended that companies choose more than one fully automatic folder-gluer machine and have each dedicated to a specific box material. This allows companies to produce a high volume of different box materials at the same time without having to stop or pause folder-gluer production.

        Format-based needs
        If a company’s projects are such that different box materials are produced for each project and it’s not likely the company will be producing a high volume of boxes for each project, the company’s needs would be classified as format-based.

        In this situation, choosing a semi-automatic folder-gluer is recommended since it is more versatile and flexible, allowing companies to meet customers’ requests for different box formats.

        Now that it is known what the production needs are, the second most important factor to consider is: How much space is available?

        2. How will space be organized for the new folder-gluer?

        Knowing that the company needs a new folder-gluer is important, but just as important is knowing how this new machine will fit on the production floor.

        It’s no secret that finding good operators these days is hard, and labor shortages have become a serious problem affecting the packaging industry. Thus, if the company’s needs are volume-based, then more than one operator will be needed. In addition, packing staff (or packers) also may be needed to pack the boxes into cases after they come off the folder-gluer delivery belt.

        Most companies needs for a folder-gluer can be broken down into two types: volume-based needs and format-based needs.

        This is all to say that if a company is thinking about buying a new folder-gluer, consider the space on the production floor and how operators and packing staff will be moving around workstations, with respect to the folder-gluer.

        I know, it sounds like a lot to consider, but the good news is that companies do not need to personally calculate all of those factors. A folder-gluer supplier should help with these considerations before companies buy. Hence, make sure a reliable folder-gluer supplier is found with whom a solid long-term partnership can be formed for after-sale needs, which this article will get to next.

        Ask Impack for recommendations on folder-gluer suppliers, if in doubt. We work with small companies, medium-sized companies and some of the biggest names in the packaging industry. We know what folder-gluer brands are on the floors of the least to the most successful box manufacturers.

        3. What post-purchase services are important to the company?

        When evaluating different options of folder-gluers, ask suppliers about past problems they have experienced with that specific model, but, more importantly, what after-sales services they offer. The answers will speak volumes about the only thing that truly matters in those types of relationships: reliability.

        The biggest cost a company will incur is not the cost of the new folder-gluer but rather the productivity loss that will be incurred as a result of the machine breaking down, failing or not being utilized to its maximum capacity.

        Find a folder-gluer supplier that truly cares about the service it offers after the sale. Make sure to consider everything, from the maintenance of the folder-gluer to the installment, training and delivery services.

        After all, every single machine eventually will break down, fail or come across some sort of issue. It is what a company can do to fix it and maintain it that truly matters.

        Ready to buy? Choose the right one.

        As can be seen, there are a lot of factors to consider when buying a new folder-gluer; and it is impossible to think of everything before making the investment.

        Reading this article can help those trying to make an informed and educated decision. After all, buying a folder-gluer machine is a big decision, and companies certainly
        do not want to regret their purchase a few months down the line.

        Hani Hallal is the marketing manager at IMPACK. To get answers to the most common folder-gluer problems, visit www.Impack.ca.

        The Easiest Way to Increase Sales May Be Right Under Your Nose

        December 13, 2022

        By Mark Porter, Dienamic MIS Software, Inc.

        Successful businesses continually are looking for ways to increase sales and profits. Looking for new products, new processes and new markets are common approaches to meeting these objectives. These methods often are costly and time intensive. There are significant increases in sales and profits that can be obtained much more easily, and they are right under your nose.

        There are significant increases in sales and profits to be had by simply taking control of the business in the following ways:

        1. Determine the true costs of running the business
        2. Increase revenue from existing clients
        3. Maximize efficiency and reduce waste
        4. Eliminate mistakes that turn good jobs into bad jobs

        Determine the true costs of running the business

        It is vital to know what the true costs are to know what profits will be on each job. This allows the finisher to determine which jobs to aggressively seek and which jobs to refuse. Budgeted hourly rate software is available that will help determine the true cost to operate each machine, and productivity analysis software can determine the true speeds and times achieved by the equipment. These true costs and standards can then be used in an estimating system that will determine the true cost of each quote produced.

        We all know: Sales – Costs = Profits. If we don’t know our costs, how do we know our profits?

        Increase revenue from existing clients

        Of total sales, how much is created by changes to the original job specifications received from the client? Every print finisher/bindery experiences these changes. The estimate was to ship bulk in cartons and now the client wants to shrink wrap in 50s. The management of these changes can have a significant effect on the bottom line by collecting the charges from the customer or not incurring an additional cost the business ends up paying.

        The nature of today’s business is to focus on quality and delivery time, causing companies often to miss many legitimate extra charges. These charges add up quickly. Let’s say a finisher has $2,000,000 in sales and that 15% of the work is for changes to the original order. That represents $300,000 in sales, if they tracked and rebilled them. By only capturing 50% of these charges, $150,000 is being left on the table.

        Finishers must take an approach to their business, much like the housing industry. These changes are happening, and someone has to pay for them – the business or the client. The estimate represents the original blueprint, and a changes management system allows the business to capture these legitimate chargeable changes that happen during the production process.

        The most effective way to accomplish this is through an order entry system. By computerizing the order entry process, finishers can lock in the original job specifications for the order – those that match the estimate. As the job is produced and changes are requested or needed, the order entry system date, time, employee and reason stamps the changes. The system will generate a change form that is sent to the customer with the price and the approval. The chargeable changes are automatically added to the invoice and documented to a report that management can review at the billing stage. The business is now tracking all extra charges and providing the backup to the customer to substantiate the charges and increase the likelihood of collecting them. This will either increase sales or reduce costs – every change made to a job is costing money to either the customer or the business.

        Maximize efficiency and reduce waste

        The easiest way to maximize efficiency and reduce waste is to make people accountable for the time and materials they use. If an employee knows that he/she can be questioned on the length of time that it took to perform a task or the amount of material used to produce a job, be assured they will be productive. Employee performance can be compared to identify employees who need more training or supervision. This can only make employees more efficient and have a positive effect on the bottom line.

        The benefits of accountability are tremendous. Even a small 5% increase in productivity and decrease in waste can mean a significant increase in profits. If we use the same $2,000,000 finisher that has $1,800,000 in costs – a 5% change is $90,000.
        By placing computers on the plant floor, employees are required to be accountable for every minute of their day and every piece of material they use on every job. This also tracks the time and utilization of the equipment. It’ll tell how much time was spent on running, makereadying, cleaning, repairing, maintaining or waiting in any time period. With computers on the plant floor, not only are employees sending information to the office, but the office is sending information to them in real time. This means changes made to orders, changes in scheduling can be communicated to the plant immediately in real time to ensure costly mistakes are not made.

        Empower employees with technology that will benefit them and the business.

        Eliminate mistakes that turn good jobs into bad jobs

        Nothing is more frustrating than receiving a nice job and then losing money on it due to preventable mistakes: last-minute changes that don’t make it onto the job jacket in time, changes that are not well documented and missed or past mistakes that are repeated. Technology today can help prevent costly mistakes with applications in the following areas:

        1. Electronic order entry
        2. Customer profiling
        3. Job notes
        4. Problem history

        Electronic order entry

        Although there seems to be a reluctance to get rid of a physical job bag completely, as it is required to hold certain items, the reliance for it to provide information to plant employees should be questioned. The plant should be using an electronic version of the order. This ensures all employees always will have access to the most current job information. The information on the electronic order is always updated in real time – the minute a change is made in the office, it is immediately reflected on the electronic order. Employees eliminate wasted time looking for or inquiring about the correct job specifications. The electronic order will be linked to job notes, customer profile and problem history for that specific job.

        Customer profiling

        Customer profiling allows details specific to a customer, including production and shipping details, and even how the president takes his/her coffee, to be entered. Any piece of information that will ensure the customer’s work is produced exactly as expected, or procedures, should be entered. This will eliminate errors, improve quality and provide the greatest customer satisfaction.

        This information is available to all employees at all stages of administration and production. A specific employee no longer has to be relied upon to know the finer details of a customer’s requirements. A great example is if the shipper is looking at a skid with 11,000 pieces on it and the job bag that states the quantity is 10,000. If the shipper looks at the profile and sees the customer accepts 5% overs, they can ship 10,500 which maximizes revenue and holds the other 500 back, which could be sold to the customer at a later date.

        Job notes

        A description that shows cryptic notes or shortforms that no one understands will only lead to costly mistakes. Software allows electronic notes to be attached and automatically warns anyone looking at that job that there are notes. With plenty of space to enter detailed notes and warnings that tell employees the notes exist, there is no way employees can miss vital information that will determine the success on a job.

        Problem history

        As the old saying goes, “You are not a fool for making a mistake – only when you make the same mistake twice.” Making preventable mistakes is the most frustrating way to lose money. If problems are not recorded and attached while producing a job, the same mistakes likely will be repeated. These problems can be seen at the estimating stage. Estimates can be adjusted. Issues can be reviewed when the job comes in, and issues that caused problems last time before the job was accepted can be reviewed at the end of a job to help analyze what went wrong and what can be learned. The system also is good at documenting issues on jobs that are going wrong to try to limit liability. The system allows photos and video of the problems to be attached as proof. It can be used as a relationship building tool to explain to customers how they can provide their jobs for the best most economical results.

        The system also is a database of problems and solutions that can be used generically for common situations that may occur in the plant – finding previous solutions to those problems.

        Automating the company in the office and plant with the proper software and hardware can save tens, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars each year by helping finishers know their true costs, maximizing their productivity, minimizing waste and preventing mistakes with real-time data to help them make more profitable decisions.

        Mark Porter is president of Dienamic Software MIS Inc. Porter can be reached at mark@dienamicmis.com. Learn more at www.dienamicmis.com.

        Dreyer Kliche Uses Danish Fairy Tale to Demonstrate Creative Extremes of Hot Foil Stamping, Embossing

        December 12, 2022

        By Erin La Row, editor, PostPress

        Nineteenth century author Hans Christian Andersen dreamed up The Snow Queen – a fairy tale of good vs. evil, friendship and love, and adventure. Nearly 180 years later, Dreyer Kliche, a creative die manufacturer based in Copenhagen, Denmark, brought its interpretation of the enchanting story to life with its The Snow Queen self-promotion posters – a project to demonstrate the creative extremes of hot foil stamping and embossing.

        “We used our own national treasure, Hans Christian Andersen, with this year’s self-promotion theme – The Snow Queen,” said Conni Dreyer, CEO and owner of Dreyer Kliche. “The mixed imagery of the story gives us so many opportunities to be expressive and varied.”

        Dreyer Kliche collaborated with Foilco, a company based in Warrington, England, on the hot stamping foils for the project. Several foil colors were incorporated with the use of Dreyer Kliche’s brass engravings for all the foil elements. This included flat stamp and multi-level embossing engravings. Micro-structured patterns also were used in several areas. The micro-structured patterns provide a visual change in the look, as well as add a tactile finish. Dreyer Kliche structured dies can be incorporated into small and larger areas of a foiled image.

        The result is a beautiful, multi-sensory four-piece printed interpretation of the Danish author’s fairy tale.

        “Across the pieces, we used stamping foils for every print component. It ensured totally exact registration when combining so many foils and effects,” Dreyer said.

        The imagery
        The engravings were precision engraved brass for foil stamping and multi-level embossing. All of the foil and embossing passes were accomplished on a Kluge foil stamping press. The paper stock used was Iggesund’s Invercote G, 300 gsm board.

        “The Invercote always is consistent and can handle numerous processes,” Dreyer said. “It is an excellent paper for accepting both the foil and deep embossed images.”

        The Snow Queen used five flat foil dies and five foil colors combined with micro-structure, flat stamping and multilevel embossing. Most of the sheet is covered in several layers of metallic and pearl foils.

        The Crown used five flat foil dies and four foil colors and a specially designed stamping foil Foilco created and branded as Clarity. Clarity is a transparent stamping foil that has had a small percentage of tint added to it. The contrast on the white board is, therefore, much greater and more luxurious than ordinary clear stamping foils that simulate spot UV.

        “It’s totally unique, and we find we are constantly drawn to it for a lot of our creative ideas,” Dreyer said. “We used multi-level emboss diamond shapes to add high levels of detail out from the board.”

        The Jewelry design draws on a similar desired effect but with six flat foil dies and six foil colors. The shapes are varied on the embossing for contrast and offer very fine line foiling.

        “This challenged our embossing techniques even more,” Dreyer said. “If we cut too deep, then we faced splitting the board from the back, so we pushed the 300 gsm as far as we could go. The tactility we created is something very special.”

        The Kai and Gerda sheet used four flat foil dies with a choice of four complementary foil colors. This used different combinations of foils on the icicles artwork with embossing, in contrast to the background cave image with added micro-structure in the foiling die.

        “There is no other print medium that gives you these opportunities. With each success we achieve, and winning awards, like the FSEA Gold Leaf Award, it just pushes us on to take new challenges in our work,” Dreyer said. “A collective team effort means a sense of shared pride for us and also means we will be back next year with something just as special.”

        Dreyer said The Snow Queen designs position the company with its customers as a recognized premium die supplier. She added, “The goal is to inspire them to be increasingly creative. If we can do that, we’ve done our job.”

        Roland DGA Announces Key Organizational Changes

        February 16, 2022

        Roland DGA Corporation, Irvine, California, has announced three key organizational changes for its leadership team.

        Amado Lara, previously Roland DGA director of sales, has been promoted to vice president of sales and will oversee sales, business development and product management throughout North and South America, as well as DGSHAPE Americas.

        Yadira Cepeda, who manages the company’s sales development department, also will oversee the Roland DGA customer service department as director of sales development and customer service.

        Finally, Roland DGA has brought on Peter Chen as director of service to manage technical support and field service functions.

        To learn more, visit www.rolanddga.com.

        « Previous Page



        The Official Publication of the Foil & Specialty Effects Association
        © 2025 All Rights Reserved
        Peterson Media Group | publish@petersonmediagroup.com
        785.271.5801
        2150 SW Westport Dr., Suite 501, Topeka, KS 66614