Dye Sub - Dye Sublimation is a printing process where the colour dyes are thermally transferred to the printing media.
Dye Sublimation: A type of printing process in which a dye ribbon is heated by the print head creating a gas that hardens onto special paper.
Dye Sub Thermal Dye Sublimation A printing process where the ink is thermally transferred to printing media. Usually expensive but providing extremely high quality. Thermal dye printers require special paper. Dynamic Range ...
dye sublimation an imaging process that vaporizes colorant with heat and pressure and deposits it onto a substrate in order to simulate a continuous tone or line image.
Thermal dye sublimation printer A high resolution, continuous tone printer. This technology allows the dot intensity to vary and to create many more colours than thermal wax.
Dye sub printers have their colored dyes in print-sized panels of cyan, magenta, yellow and black and require special paper that's designed to absorb the vaporous dye on contact. In many cases you buy the dyes and paper together.
The Dye Sublimation Archive - A Polaroid Gallery- Images made on a 8x10 camera The Gallery At The Solitary Arc - Samples of 8x10 Black-and-White Photographs, primarily of portraiture.
This yellow dye subtracts blue light. A blue image is formed by magenta dye (minus green) and cyan dye (minus red), thus leaving blue.
The CP-10 is a new card sized photo printer (dye sub) from Canon which allows you to print directly from a compatible digital camera (currently the A10, A20 and IXUS 300, and future Canon digital cameras).
Photo Printers - Canon SELPHY CP510 and CP710 Dye Sublimation Printers - CP-220 Compact Photo Printer - i900D Photo Printer Scanners - Canoscan FS4000US Accessories - BP50 Battery Pack - Off Camera Shoe Cord 2 - Speedlite 380EX ...
Printing method developed by Irish manufacturer Alps that's similar to dye sublimation as it uses a heated element to fuse the ribbon ink to special paper for high resolution and longer life. Bookmark This MTF Modulation transfer function.
Colored toner became available in the 1950s, although full-color copiers were not commercially available until 3M released the Color-in-Color copier in 1968, which used a dye sublimation process rather than conventional electrostatic technology.
A printing method where a waxy ink is heated to temperatures high enough for the ink to vaporize, and is then forced to bond with a special receiver paper. The dye sublimation (dye-sub) printing method produces images with continuous tone color.
Among other things, you'll learn about such printing techniques as relief, letterpress, gravure, silver-dye bleach, dye sublimation and direct thermal. The object explorer allows you to view two images side by side to compare traits across processes.
A printing technique in which inks are heated and transferred to a polyester substrate to form an image. Because the amount of color applied can be varied by the degree of heat (and up to 256 different hues for each color), dye sublimation devices ...
Dye sublimation printers form images by delivering dyes to the paper using heat. Images are close to photo quality but as yet consumer models can only produce small prints and they are unsuitable for normal correspondence as special paper is needed.
See also: Image, Print, Digital, Photograph, Dye sublimation
 
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