What digital printing is Toner / electrophotography Inkjet HP Indigo Variable data Short run economics Quality comparison When to use digital
Printing Processes · Section A

Digital Printing · The Complete Guide

What digital printing is and how it differs fundamentally from offset, how toner electrophotography works, how commercial inkjet works, what HP Indigo is and why it occupies a category of its own, variable data printing and personalisation, the economics of short runs versus offset, quality comparison across technologies, and the definitive guide to when digital is the right process.

What digital printing is · no plates, no makeready, every sheet from the file

Digital printing transfers an image directly from a digital file to a substrate, without the intermediate steps of plate making, blanket transfer, ink-water balance, or makeready. Every copy is produced directly from the digital data. This means the first copy costs the same as the thousandth copy, there is no waste from makeready, and the image can change between every single sheet if needed.

These three characteristics, no makeready cost, no plate cost, and the ability to change content between copies, define what digital printing is for and where it fits relative to offset. Digital printing is not a cheaper version of offset. It is a fundamentally different process with a different cost structure, different quality profile, and different capabilities. Understanding the difference correctly is what allows a client or designer to choose the right process for each job rather than defaulting to one or the other.

The crossover point, where offset becomes cheaper per copy than digital, varies by job complexity, press room, and market. In India, a typical commercial job crosses over at approximately 500–1,000 copies for simple work and 300–700 copies for complex multi-colour work with spot colours. Below that crossover, digital is usually the economically correct choice. Above it, offset almost always wins on unit cost.

Toner electrophotography · how laser digital printing works

Toner-based digital printing (also called electrophotography or laser printing) is the most widely used digital printing technology for commercial print in India. It is used in production digital presses from manufacturers including Xerox, Konica Minolta, Canon, and Ricoh.

How toner electrophotography works

  • Step 1, Charge: a rotating photoreceptor drum is uniformly charged with static electricity across its entire surface.
  • Step 2, Expose: a laser beam scans across the drum, discharging the surface in the exact pattern of the image. Image areas lose their charge; non-image areas retain it.
  • Step 3, Develop: fine charged toner particles are attracted to the discharged image areas on the drum surface. The toner sticks electrostatically where the laser exposed the drum.
  • Step 4, Transfer: the toner image is transferred from the drum to the paper, either directly or via an intermediate transfer belt.
  • Step 5, Fuse: the paper passes through a fuser, heated rollers that melt and fuse the toner particles permanently into the paper surface. This is what produces the slightly raised, plasticky feel of toner-printed documents.

Characteristics of toner printing

  • Toner is a dry powder fused to the surface, it does not absorb into the paper fibres like offset ink. This creates a distinctly different surface feel and light reflection characteristic compared to offset.
  • Toner printing does not require any drying time, sheets are dry and usable immediately after fusing.
  • Toner has slightly lower colour gamut than offset on coated papers for vivid colours, but is comparable for most business and commercial content.
  • Toner can flake at fold lines if paper is not scored properly, the fused toner film can crack under sharp folding. This is a critical consideration for booklets and brochures produced digitally.
  • Toner presses run at 60–130 A4 pages per minute for high-speed production models.

Commercial inkjet · high speed, wide format, growing in India

Commercial inkjet printing fires microscopic droplets of liquid ink directly onto the substrate through thousands of tiny nozzles in a printhead. Unlike toner printing, inkjet ink absorbs into or bonds with the substrate surface rather than sitting fused on top of it. This produces a different visual and tactile result, inkjet output on coated paper often looks closer to offset than toner output does.

Types of commercial inkjet relevant in India

  • Production sheetfed inkjet, presses like the Ricoh Pro Z75 and Konica Minolta AccurioJet produce A3+ format sheets at high speed. Used for books, direct mail, and short-run commercial work. Growing rapidly in India as the technology matures.
  • High-speed web inkjet, continuous-feed presses like the Canon ProStream and Ricoh Pro VC series print on reels at speeds approaching heat-set web offset. Used for high-volume books, direct mail, catalogues.
  • Wide-format inkjet, large format printers (600mm–5000mm wide) for banners, posters, signage, display graphics. This is a separate category from commercial print, wide-format inkjet is almost always the only viable process for very large format single copies.

Inkjet ink types

  • Aqueous (water-based), standard for most commercial inkjet. Requires coated or specially treated paper for good print quality. Produces excellent colour but has limited water resistance without coating.
  • UV-curable inkjet, the ink is cured instantly by UV lamps. Prints on virtually any surface including rigid substrates, films, glass, and metal. Used for specialty applications and packaging prototypes.
  • Latex inkjet, water-based inks that cure by heat. Good outdoor durability and flexibility. Common in wide-format signage printing.

HP Indigo · liquid electrophotography and why it is different

HP Indigo is a digital printing technology that uses liquid ink (called ElectroInk) rather than dry toner powder or aqueous inkjet. It occupies a unique position in the digital printing landscape, producing output that is visually and tactilely closer to offset than any other digital technology, while retaining all the benefits of digital (no plates, variable data, short run viability).

How HP Indigo works

HP Indigo uses the same electrophotographic principle as toner printing (charge, expose, develop, transfer) but with a crucial difference, the "toner" is a liquid ink with very fine pigment particles suspended in an oil carrier. This liquid ElectroInk forms an extremely thin film on the substrate, similar in thickness to offset ink. The result is a printed surface that has offset-like gloss, colour depth, and feel, rather than the plasticky surface of fused dry toner.

Why HP Indigo matters in India

  • HP Indigo is increasingly present in Indian premium commercial print and packaging environments. It is used for premium short-run packaging prototypes, personalised luxury packaging, pharmaceutical labels, and high-quality marketing collateral where offset quality at short run quantities is required.
  • HP Indigo can print on a very wide range of substrates including coated papers, uncoated papers, synthetic films, and some board grades, broader than standard toner digital presses.
  • The colour gamut of HP Indigo with its 7-colour ink set (CMYK + Orange, Violet, Green) exceeds the standard CMYK offset gamut, making it particularly suitable for brand-colour-critical work at short runs.
  • Cost per copy is higher than standard toner digital but lower than offset for runs below approximately 2,000–3,000 copies, depending on the job.
HP Indigo and food packaging

HP Indigo has developed food-safe certified ink sets (HP ElectroInk Silver and HP ElectroInk in food-compliant configurations) that meet EU and FDA migration standards for food-adjacent packaging. This makes HP Indigo viable for short-run food packaging, particularly pharmaceutical blisters, specialty food labels, and premium food cartons, where offset food-safe inks would require a full press run minimum quantity. Verify the specific ink set and substrate combination with the HP Indigo operator before specifying for food contact applications.

Variable data printing · personalisation at scale

Variable data printing (VDP) is the ability to change specified elements of a design, text, images, barcodes, QR codes, addresses, names, on every single copy, while the rest of the design remains constant. Every copy is different. The data comes from a database that is merged with the design template at print time.

What can be variable

  • Text, names, addresses, personalised messages, account numbers, invoice details, event-specific information. The most common form of variable data.
  • Images, different product photographs for different recipient segments, personalised charts or graphs, location-specific photography.
  • Barcodes and QR codes, unique codes per copy for tracking, authentication, loyalty programmes, or linking to personalised URLs (PURLs).
  • Colours and design elements, different brand colours for different regions or product variants on otherwise identical templates.

VDP applications in India

  • Direct mail personalisation, addressed envelopes, personalised offer letters, loyalty programme mailers
  • Event tickets and badges, each ticket unique with name, seat, QR code
  • Pharmaceutical packaging, batch numbers, expiry dates, serial codes (often regulatory requirements)
  • Financial documents, account statements, policy documents, personalised financial reports
  • Educational certificates and graduation stationery, name and details unique per recipient
  • Retail loyalty cards and vouchers, unique barcodes, personalised offers
File preparation for variable data, what the designer must provide

A VDP job requires two separate deliverables from the design side: (1) the fixed template, the PDF or InDesign file with all constant design elements, with clearly marked fields where variable data will appear, and (2) the data file, typically a CSV or Excel spreadsheet with one row per copy and columns for each variable field. Field names in the data file must exactly match the field names marked in the template. Any mismatch, special character conflict, or encoding error in the data file will cause either a failed job or incorrect data merging. Always test with a 5-copy proof before committing the full data run to print.

Short run economics · understanding the cost crossover

The decision between digital and offset is primarily an economic one at quantities where both processes are technically capable. Understanding the cost structure of each process enables the correct decision.

Why digital has a flat cost per copy

Digital printing has almost no setup cost. The press reads the file and starts printing. There are no plates to make (no plate cost, no plate-making time), no makeready sheets wasted, and no setup labour charge beyond loading paper and pressing go. Every copy costs approximately the same, predominantly ink/toner and paper. This makes digital ideal for quantities of 1 to several hundred copies where offset's fixed setup cost would be prohibitive.

Why offset gets cheaper with volume

Offset has a large fixed cost (plates, makeready time, makeready waste paper) that does not change regardless of how many copies are printed. Once the press is set up and running, each additional copy adds only the variable cost of ink and paper, which is extremely low per copy at offset's running speeds. As quantity increases, the fixed cost is shared across more and more copies, driving the cost per copy down steeply.

QuantityDigital total cost (indicative)Offset total cost (indicative)Better process
50 copies A4 4C brochure₹3,500–6,000₹18,000–25,000 (makeready + short run)Digital, offset unviable at this quantity
250 copies₹12,000–18,000₹20,000–28,000Digital, still cheaper, faster turnaround
500 copies₹22,000–32,000₹22,000–32,000Crossover, comparable. Digital for speed; offset for quality.
1,000 copies₹40,000–55,000₹28,000–38,000Offset, significantly cheaper per copy
5,000 copies₹180,000–240,000₹60,000–85,000Offset, 3× cheaper, dramatically better unit economics
20,000 copiesNot viable economically₹120,000–180,000Offset, only viable option at this volume

These figures are indicative and vary significantly by press room, job complexity, substrate, and market conditions. The principles hold universally: digital wins at low quantities; offset wins at high quantities; the crossover in India is typically 500–1,000 copies for standard commercial work.

Commercial, digital decision triggers

In commercial print, digital is the correct choice whenever: the quantity is below 500 copies, the job requires personalisation or variable content, a very fast turnaround is needed (same-day or next-day), or the client needs to proof a design before committing to a full offset run. These four scenarios cover the majority of legitimate digital commercial print jobs.

Packaging, digital decision triggers

Digital packaging print (HP Indigo and UV inkjet) is used for: short-run premium packaging prototypes, limited edition runs below 1,000–2,000 units, pharmaceutical serialisation and track-and-trace, personalised luxury packaging, and sample packs for new product launches. Digital packaging in India is growing but still represents a small fraction of total packaging volume compared to offset.

Quality comparison · digital vs offset, honestly assessed

Quality attributeOffsetToner digitalHP IndigoInkjet digital
Colour gamut (CMYK)Excellent, ISOcoated_v2 standardGood, slightly narrower in vividsExcellent, can exceed offset with extended gamutGood to excellent, varies by system
Colour consistency run-to-runExcellent when well managedVery good, digital stability advantageVery goodGood
Fine detail and text sharpnessExcellent at 150+ LPIGood, 600–1200 dpi equivalentExcellent, very fine dotGood, varies by resolution
Surface feel on coated paperExcellent, ink absorbs into coatingNoticeably different, raised toner surfaceVery close to offsetClose to offset, absorbs more
Fold cracking riskLow, with correct scoringHigh, toner can crack at foldsLow, similar to offsetLow
Spot colour accuracyExcellent, dedicated spot ink unitLimited, CMYK simulation onlyGood, extended gamut helpsLimited, CMYK simulation only
Substrate rangeVery wide, 60–400 GSM paper and boardLimited, optimised substrates onlyWide, papers, films, some boardsWide, depends on ink type
Maximum sheet/formatUp to B1 (720×1020mm) and beyondTypically SRA3 maximumTypically B2 maximumUp to very large in wide-format
The "digital quality has caught up with offset" claim, the honest answer

For most commercial content, documents, reports, standard brochures, business cards, a well-produced digital job is indistinguishable from offset to a non-expert eye. For premium work, rich photography on high-gloss coated paper, Pantone-matched brand colours, metallic inks, heavy coverage packaging, offset still produces a surface quality and colour depth that current digital processes cannot fully replicate. The gap is closing and HP Indigo in particular is genuinely close for many applications. But for high-end packaging and premium commercial work, offset remains the quality benchmark.

When to use digital · the definitive decision guide

Use digital whenUse offset instead when
Quantity is below 500 copies, digital's flat cost per copy is lower than offset's fixed setup cost at low quantities Quantity exceeds 1,000 copies, offset unit economics are substantially better and quality is higher
Every copy must be different, names, addresses, serial codes, personalised content. Only digital can do this. Consistent identical copies are required across the full run, offset produces identically matched sheets once the press is settled
Turnaround is same-day or next-day, digital starts immediately, no plate making, no makeready Premium surface quality is required, high-gloss coated paper with rich photography, metallic inks, special surface effects
Proofing before a larger offset run, print 5–10 digital copies to check content, layout, and colour before plating Exact Pantone spot colour matching is required, digital presses simulate spot colours in CMYK; they cannot match them
Print on demand is needed, produce copies as orders arrive rather than printing and storing a full run Large format (above SRA3) is required, most digital presses are limited to SRA3; offset scales to B1 and beyond
The design will change frequently, no plate cost means design changes are free; just update the file and reprint Heavy board packaging (above 350 GSM) is required, most digital presses cannot handle heavy board; offset is the correct process

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