This article explains Dye Sublimation Printing
and the difference between Inkjet & Dye Sublimation
Printing
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How does it work?.
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Dye-sublimation is a process of creating photographs by a printing technique
that diffuses dye onto paper. This dye comes in the form of a ribbon and is
converted into a diffused gas when heat is applied. The dye is then absorbed by
a special receiving layer on the paper. A special print head warms to various
precise temperatures and creates different levels of color depending on the
amount of heat produced. The print head in the Hi-Touch consumer printers is
capable of producing 256 levels of each color (cyan, magenta, yellow) and thus
able to create a total of 16.77 million true colors by combining these three
primary colors. With a special over-coating layer, the dye layers are sealed
into the paper and the image is protected against UV light, fingerprints, and
even water! There is no smudging, running, or blotching; prints are dry and
ready to touch the instant they come out of the printer!
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What are
the Technical Differences?
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Dye-sublimation differs greatly from inkjet in many ways, most significantly in
quality. Dye-sub is known for its high quality and continuous tone output.
Continuous tone means that all gradations of color are used when creating an
image. For example, when creating a gray scale, from black to white, a
continuous tone printer will show all shades of gray in between the black and
the white by actually printing them. A half-toning device such as an ink-jet
printer will use a dithering technique of placing dots close together in order
to trick the eye. In other words, ink jet printers use a series of black dots
placed close to white dots in order to trick the eye into blending the pixels
when viewed. With magnification the difference can be seen where the dye-sub
output is clear and sharp but dots can be seen on ink-jet prints.
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