Spoilage

by David Harris // December 22  

In the printing process, spoilage means any paper, ink, or toner that does not make it to the finished product and is thus wasted. This minimizes waste and contributes to better profits for printers while only using high-quality materials in final products.

It is possible to spoil from prepress to finishing at any stage in the printing process. It may occur before press due to damaged film or plates or unprepared artwork for printing. Press stage spoilage, on the other hand, may include ink leakage or faulty print. Finally, it could happen during the finishing process due to damaged bindery materials or substandard final products delivered as management promised.

Printers commonly monitor spoilage to determine what can be improved, reduce waste, and increase efficiency and profit. Printers can reduce waste while enhancing production through spoilage rates that are cost-reducing and profit-increasing.

Spoilage is a crucial element of printing that may have disastrous effects on the integrity of the ultimate product. In its definition, it is waste or unusable material produced in the printing process. This includes ink cartridges, paper waste, and even printer hardware itself.

While printing, several mishaps result in one’s spoilage or another. Mechanical spoilage from the printer includes inkjet head clogging, paper jams, or running out of ink.

This form of spoilage occurs due to misalignments between colors during the printing stages. Such occurrence leads to the formation of strips or streaks on the last printed pages, which are difficult to correct.

All these are caused by a problem of the wrong ink mixture and subsequent color spoilage during printing; this makes colors too light or dark, sometimes bleeding and off-centered.

About the Author

David Harris is a content writer at Adazing with 20 years of experience navigating the ever-evolving worlds of publishing and technology. Equal parts editor, tech enthusiast, and caffeine connoisseur, he’s spent decades turning big ideas into polished prose. As a former Technical Writer for a cloud-based publishing software company and a Ghostwriter of over 60 books, David’s expertise spans technical precision and creative storytelling. At Adazing, he brings a knack for clarity and a love of the written word to every project—while still searching for the keyboard shortcut that refills his coffee.

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