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Not to be confused with British impositions.

Imposition is one of the fundamental step in the prepress printing process. It consists in the arrangement of the printed product’s pages on the printer’s sheet, in order to obtain a faster printing, simplified binding and no waste of paper.
One of the most important goal for this step is to minimize the printing time, because of the high cost of the printing press process. In order to obtain that, the printed sheet needs to be filled as well as possible, so that nothing will be wasted, and it is possible to reduce the cost.
Imposition is affected by five different parameters:
- format of the product: it can determine how many pages can be on a surface of the printed sheet.
- number of pages of the printed product: it can determine how many sheet need to be paginated in order to obtain one product.
- paper fiber direction: in a durable and good product the paper fiber has to run lengthwise along the sine of fold, so this influences the position of the pages on the printed sheet.
- Finishing and binding
- Stitching method : is important to understand how the sheet are placed , in order to form the product, by forming signature.
All those factors determine how the imposition shall be done.
To understand how the pages are related to each other it is used a Imposition dummy.
This is done by folding several simple A4 sheets paper in the way the printer press will print and fold the product. A little copy is then created , and this can be an aid to paginate the product.[1]

8up imposition.svg

In the example above, a 16 page book is prepared for printing. There are eight pages on the front of the sheet, and the corresponding eight pages on the back. After printing, the paper will be folded in half vertically (page two falls against page three). Then it will be folded again horizontally (page four meets page five). A third fold completes this process (page nine meets page eight). The example below shows the final result prior to binding and trimming.

16 page book.svg

Contents

Non-digital techniques

Imposition has been a requirement since the earliest days of printing. When pages were set using movable type, pages were assembled in a metal frame called a chase, and locked into place using wedges called quoins.

By the late twentieth century, most typesetting was onto photographic film. These sheets were combined manually on a light table, in a process called stripping. Skilled workers would spend many hours stripping pieces of film together in the correct sequence and orientation. The term stripping was also used for other changes to a prepared page, such as a spelling correction, or a "stop press" story in a newspaper. Digital techniques rendered stripping less necessary, but what has forced increasing numbers to abandon it completely is the introduction of "platesetters", which put pages directly onto printing plates; these plates cannot be adjusted with a sharp knife. In addition, an extremely high precision would be needed for stripping of colour work, as each ink colour is on a separate piece of film.

Digital techniques

In recent years, the process of imposition has been automated by computers and is sometimes called digital stripping. Digital imposition was invented in 1988 by Ultimate Technographics Inc. An entire book may be imposed and many complex functions applied in an instant. Binding options may be changed on the fly and impositions produced to multiple output devices at once, often with no user-intervention at all. There are several different approaches to digital imposition.

  • In the design application. If a software package can be used to design single pages, it can often be used to design entire printed sheets, sometimes by a process as simple as copy/paste onto a larger sheet. This is still in use, especially for low volumes of work, but a popular alternative is an imposition function built in, or added in, to the design tool. This would typically take a document prepared as single pages, and create a new document with much larger pages containing full sheet layouts. This larger layout could then be printed to film or plate, as normal.
  • Post-design imposition might take a PostScript or PDF file in single pages, and produce a new PostScript or PDF file with sheet layouts, which could then be printed. A variation of this would take a large number of files as input, each containing a single page. This is especially suitable for a magazine or newspaper where pages may be worked on by different groups at the same time.
  • Print driver imposition would add functions to a printer driver so that the application program printed single pages, but what was sent to the printer was full sheets. This is not often found in professional production, but is popular for such things as booklet printing on office laser printers. A variation of this offers the ability to print layouts as an option in the application.
  • Imposition could be placed into the output device. This is sometimes called "in-RIP imposition". This allows regular pages to be printed by any suitable means, and the output device does the work of imposition. This has the advantage that the imposition can be specifically tuned for each different output device. However, it may for some have a corresponding disadvantage that there is no preview until the output is produced, which may be a costly printing plate that takes some time to produce, or even (with a digital press) finished copies; expensive mistakes are possible.

Where an imposition layout is viewed on screen, it may be referred to as a printer's spread. This is used to contrast with reader's spread, which shows a finished printed piece on screen as it will appear to the reader, rather than the printer; specifically, in a reader's spread for a typical book, pairs of facing pages will be shown side by side (e.g. pages 2 and 3 together).

Imposition proof

The imposition proof is the last test that is done before to begin the printing press of the product.
This test is performed to verify, through the formation of a prototype, that the imposition was successful, by checking if the pages are on the correct spot, the crossover bleeds works. It cannot be used as a check proof for images or colors or layout, because it is printed on a large inkjet printer. the imposition proof is therefore a low-resolution printing. Being printed by an inkjet printer only one side of the paper can be print-out, and to get the full proof ,the first and Secunda sides , it has to be printed on two separate sheets.
They are cut first, along the crossover bleeds, checking if they are in the correct position. The two parts are attached together to form a sheet printed on double-sides, and then this sheet is folded to form a prototype of the signature.
This proof is still called blue copy, digital blue copy to prototype, blues plotter, these names come from the old imposition proof that it was characterized by having the text [2]

References

  1. ^ "A Guide to Graphic Print Production", Kay Johansson, Peter Lundberg, Robert Ryberg. Ed:WIley ISBN 9780471761389
  2. ^ "A Guide to Graphic Print Production", Kay Johansson, Peter Lundberg, Robert Ryberg. Ed:WIley ISBN 9780471761389

1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From LoveToKnow 1911

IMPOSITION (from Lat. imponere, to place or lay upon), in ecclesiastical usage, the "laying on" of hands by a bishop at the services of confirmation and ordination as a sign that some special spiritual gift is conferred, or that the recipient is set apart for some special service or work. The word is also used of the levying of a burdensome or unfair tax or duty, and of a penalty, and hence is applied to a punishment task given to a schoolboy. From "impose" in the sense of "to pass off" on some one, imposition means also a trick or deception. In the printing trade the term is used of the arrangement of pages of type in the "forme," being one of the stages between composing and printing.


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