ENP Images

March 30, 2009

Quality of Digital Printing

Filed under: Printing — Tags: , , , , — ewwink @ 2:34 pm
So you want one guys opinion on color digital printing quality? Here it is.

If you are a mom and pop color copiers are an option although you don’t pay much more for much better quality. Toner based machines no matter how much they cost are still toner particles. Nexpress & IGen3 do a very good job but will still show their toner ancestry on many jobs.

These 2 machines will be very consistent on color from print to print.

The liquid ink possibilities include the DI(Direct Imaging) offset presses and the Indigo digital press family. The DI options are Heidelberg and Ryobi DI machines. These machines can’t do variable data and have a limited ink carrying capacity so can show more issues like ghosting and gradation problems.

They also will depend more on the skill of the pressperson for print to print consistency. The DI can print spot colors and uses temporary plates to produce each job.

The Indigo 3050 digital press has liquid ink technology and rivals offset printing in quality. It can do variable data printing and true spot PMS colors and will be very consistent from print to print. All in all if you want my vote for the best machine it would be the HP 3050 digital press because of the availability of doing variable data printing and quality rivaling offset.

It will be very consistent from print to print and can do spot PMS colors for branding or better color matching. It also doesn’t have that color copy ancestry look and will print screens and solids in a close to offset printing look.

March 28, 2009

Curing Art Idea Droughts in Elementary Students

Filed under: Clip Art — Tags: , , , , — ewwink @ 4:15 pm
Art in children encourages them to develop the creative part of their brain. Many students as they progress through elementary school stop drawing for a variety of reasons. Maybe they think their picture isn’t as good as the student next to them, but most of all it is because they are in an “idea drought”. They just need some help coming up with the initial idea and then their minds can take off.

One way I found to cure this “idea drought” was to generate an “ART START”. Using my computer I selected a piece of clip art and then put a title on the page such as: The small picture of a castle in the corner and then the title of My Castle, or the small picture of a pumpkin and titled it “My Jack-o-Lantern”. Just enough to give the child and idea and then they developed and built on that idea.

I designed a whole folder of ideas so that I could pull one quickly on a busy Monday morning. We took about 5 minutes and talked about the subject and ideas of what would be appropriate in that particular picture. The students were given the whole week to develop and expand on their idea during their spare time. Some got so excited that they took them home and worked especially hard on them even though they rarely took homework home.

The students were encouraged to use the paper as a canvas like an artist. They were to cover the whole page and should be proud enough of their work to sign it on the front. The use of color was encouraged

The real fun came when they were completed at the end of the week. I designed a title page for each art start and laminated it so I could use it from year to year. Then I three hole punched everything and inserted them into a big binder. The binder was put at the back of the room on a table where frequent visitors to the class would sit or at parent teacher conferences it was placed in the hall where parents who were waiting could browse through the book. The outsiders loved the book, but the students loved it more and would spend time when available browsing through the book enjoying each others art and ideas. You would hear comments such as “That’s a good idea” “I never thought of it that way” “look at all the detail”. Each week we added to the book and it was always full of fresh ideas.

The only problem was the time element. It took a lot of time to come up with ideas so if you can find them already made for you it is well worth your time.

March 26, 2009

Samsung D600: a Phone With Quality Imaging Capabilities

Slider phones have become very popular among mobile users in the United Kingdom. Samsung, the Korean company has consistently endeavoured to improve the form factor over the years to bring more customers into it’s fold. D600 is one such model from the stable of Samsung.

Samsung D600, has a matte, rubber-like grip on its rear and side surfaces to give you a better and comfortable holding. You have a bright and colourful 262K display which makes for good reading and viewing of content on the handset. Slide open the handset to find out an intuitive keypad. You have some navigation buttons to use even when the phone is closed. Weighing around 103g and measuring 96 x 46.5 x 21.5mm, the handset might be a millimetre big but is still compact and sleek to easily get into your palms.

The mobile phone sports a quality 2-megapixel digital camera, which snaps photos up to 1600 x 1200 pixels. The camera is placed on the bottom half with a flash next to it to allow you to click photos even when the handset is closed. The phone has many functions to help you click real images. You can either opt for a single photo mode or a multi-shot mode and take many shots in a few seconds. Take self-potraits with a timer mode and a mirror situated next to the lens. The image editor allows you add camera effects on the images shot.

Samsung D600 supports a Picsel Viewer to enable viewing Microsoft Office documents like Word, Excel and Powerpoint files, text, HTML, JPEG images, and PDF files. The Java games on the handsets are indulging and are an ideal way to de-stress. Other key features included in the handset are an MP3 player, call management features and a voice recorder. An expandable memory is just enough to complemet the comprehensive list of features available in this ‘must have’ mobile phone.

Samsung D600

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