Saddle stitchingAlso: staple binding, wire stitching
FinishingA binding method where printed sections are folded, collated, and stapled through the spine with wire staples. The most economical binding for publications up to 64 pages. Requires page counts in multiples of 4. See
Binding.
Safety marginAlso: live area, safe zone
Pre-PressThe zone inside the trim line where all critical design content (text, logos, barcodes) must be placed to ensure it is not cut away during finishing. Standard commercial print safety margin: 5mm from the trim on all sides. For business cards: 3mm minimum. See
Designing for Offset.
SBSSolid Bleached Sulphate / Solid Bleached Board
PaperA premium carton board manufactured entirely from bleached chemical pulp, providing a bright white, clean surface on both sides. Superior food safety profile (no recycled fibre), excellent printability, and clean crease performance. The standard board for pharmaceutical cartons in India. See
Paper & Board Grades.
Screen printingAlso: serigraphy, silk screen
ProcessA printing method that forces ink through a mesh screen onto the substrate. A stencil on the screen blocks ink in non-printing areas. Screen printing deposits the thickest ink films of any printing process (10–80 microns), making it the only process that can print opaque white on dark substrates. See
Screen Printing.
Screen rulingAlso: LPI, screen frequency
Pre-PressSee LPI. The number of halftone dot rows per linear inch. Determines the fineness of halftone reproduction. Must be matched to the substrate surface quality. See
Screen Ruling.
ScummingAlso: tinting, ink in non-image areas
OffsetAn offset press defect in which ink deposits in non-image areas, producing an overall tint or visible ink in background areas. Caused by fountain solution pH too high (alkaline), incorrect ink-water balance, or plate contamination. The most common defect arising from fountain solution pH drift above 5.5. See
Print Defects Guide.
Set-offAlso: offset, ink set-off
OffsetTransfer of wet ink from the front of one sheet to the back of the sheet above it in the delivery pile, before the ink has dried. Produces a mirror image of the print on the reverse of sheets. Prevented by anti-setoff powder, controlled ink coverage, adequate delivery pile height management, and correct ink formulation. See
Anti-Setoff Powder.
SignatureAlso: section, gathering
Pre-PressA group of pages printed on a single sheet that when folded produces a section of a book or booklet. Signatures are always in multiples of 4 pages (4pp, 8pp, 16pp, 32pp). Multiple signatures are gathered (collated) to form a complete publication. See
Imposition.
Soft proofAlso: on-screen proof
ColourAn on-screen simulation of the printed output using ICC profiles, showing how the artwork will appear when printed on a specific press and substrate. Requires a hardware-calibrated monitor. In Photoshop: View → Proof Colors. Soft proofing cannot replace a physical contract proof but allows rapid iteration during design. See
Proofing.
Soft touch laminationAlso: soft touch, velvet lamination
FinishingA BOPP lamination film with a micro-textured matte surface that produces a distinctive velvet-like tactile feel. Very low gloss (5–12 GU at 60°). Highly susceptible to fingerprinting and scuffing, requires careful handling after application. Premium specification for luxury packaging, cosmetics, and high-end commercial print. See
Lamination.
Spectrophotometer
MeasurementAn instrument that measures the complete spectral reflectance of a surface across the visible wavelength range (380–730nm). From spectral data, calculates colorimetric values (L*a*b*, ΔE). The instrument for colour verification, ICC profile building, proofing system calibration, and brand colour conformance. See
Spectrophotometer.
Spot colourSee: Pantone, special colour
ColourA pre-mixed ink printed from a dedicated ink unit rather than built from CMYK process inks. Spot colours achieve more accurate and consistent colour matching than CMYK simulation, particularly for brand colours, metallic inks, fluorescents, and any colour outside the CMYK gamut. See
Pantone & Spot Colours.
Spot UV
FinishingUV varnish applied selectively to defined areas of a laminated surface (typically over a matte lamination base) to create a high-gloss contrast effect. The UV coating is applied via a silk screen or letterpress unit. Typical spot UV gloss: 85–100 GU at 60°, against 8–18 GU matte base. Contrast ΔGloss ≥65 GU is the minimum for visible effect. See
Varnishes & Coatings.
SRA3Supplementary Raw Format A3
Pre-PressA press sheet size of 320×450mm, the standard press sheet for B2 format sheetfed offset in India. Slightly larger than A3, providing space for bleed, grippers, crop marks, and colour bars around the A3 finished print area. Most Indian commercial press rooms use SRA3 as their standard sheet. See
Paper Sizes.
Substrate
PaperAny material on which printing is applied, paper, board, film, fabric, metal, glass, or plastic. The choice of substrate affects process selection, ink formulation, lamination specification, and finished product performance. Coated paper and board are the most common substrates in Indian commercial and packaging print.
Surface energyAlso: dyne level, wettability
PackagingA measure of a substrate's ability to be wetted by inks and adhesives, expressed in dynes/cm. Polymer films (BOPP, PE, PET) have low natural surface energy and must be corona- or flame-treated to raise it to ≥38 dynes/cm for adequate ink adhesion. Verify with dyne pens before printing on film substrates. See
Labels.