a paper type imaging material created by using a large printers camera and exposing the paper to light through a lens. Used for camera ready logos, halftones. Virgin fiber fiber that has never been used before in the manufacture of paper or other products.
This is the word used when a picture of an ad is reproduced on photographic paper.
a positive, photographic paper image in black and white created from a negative.
Black and white print for proofing or for display. Halftone possesses full contrast and shows what the copy will look like when reproduced.
A photographic print made from a screen negative.
screened print ready for stripping final copy.
A photographic paper used for shooting halftones. Also called a photomechanical transfer, or PMT.
a good choice for one color jobs and gives a better look at halftone images than a blueline will
The trade name for one of the chloride printing papers made by Kodak; sometimes erroneously used to describe similar developing papers. A black and white print of the halftone image; a screened print. Also referred to as a positive proof, which shows the printing image as seen on final piece..
A photoprint that has been transformed into line art by means of a halftone screen.
A black and white print of a screened image, line art, and/or copy.
A photographic paper print made from a screened negative.
A photographic print which is made from a negative.
A reproduction of an original piece of art or a photo. May be line, halftone, or a combination.
Photoprint with halftone dot pattern in place of continuous tone, ready for line reproduction. (See PMI)
A black and white print for proofing or for display.
A photoprint with a halftone dot pattern in place of continuous tone, ready for line reproduction.
Kodak trade name for high-contrast photographic paper. Also refers to a positive made by contact printing a negative to such paper.