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Easy DIY e-commerce program for the technologically limited

January 31, 2012 in design, the business card blog, WAHMs, web design and seo

More than 229,000 shops have been created with ShopFactory, according to company personnel, and more than 100 million people visit ShopFactory shops every month.

ShopFactory is a Windows-based editor you maintain your store with. It also has some additional hosted secure services you can add to extend the functionality of your shop, including delivery of digital goods, reseller tracking and a few other secure hosted services.

ShopFactory allows shop owners to build and maintain their shops on their own computers, and hosts the order management online in a PCI-compliant environment for improved security. Building a shop on your own computer is much faster.

And because ShopFactory uses a client-side shopping cart (a technology similar to the solutions provided by Google), it is also considerably faster for customers to make an order. A faster ordering process, of course, means more sales.

The hosted order management also adds many extra ecommerce functions, including services such as selling event tickets, setting up a network reseller scheme or tracking advertising expenditure.

Another strength of ShopFactory is its ability to create search engine-friendly shops out of the box, with many users achieving top rankings in search engines. And, while ShopFactory has one of the biggest ranges of functions available in an ecommerce product, it is so easy to use that even a beginner can use it to start selling on the Internet

This solution has all you need to get a site up and going, and to grow with.

Design and print Jargon

December 21, 2011 in brochures, business cards, design, flyers and such, postcards and dl cards, printing, the business card blog

Some common terms used in design and printing, and what they mean:

Artwork 

All original copy, including type, photos and illustrations, intended for printing. Also called art.

PP / pp

Number of pages, eg. an 8pp booklet has 8 pages, or two sheets of paper printed both sides, folded and stapled to form eight sides. A DL 6pp is a single sheet of A4 folded into three panels, totalling 6 sides.

Saddle stitched

Stapled along the fold, as in a booklet.

cmyk

Refers to the full colour printing process, where artwork is separated into four plates, ready for four ink colours. CMYK is an abbreviation of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black, which when combined on the paper form the full colour result. Also called four colour process printing, or full colour printing.

Coated Paper

Paper with a coating of clay and other substances that improves reflectivity and ink holdout. Coating may be gloss or matte. Uncoated paper, such as bond and photocopy paper, do not have this coating.

Commercial Printer

Printer producing a wide range of products such as business cards, brochures, posters, booklets, stationery, business forms, booklets and magazines. Also called job printer because each job is different.

Die Cut / Cutting Die

To cut irregular shapes in paper or paperboard using a die.  A cutting die is the custom item used to trim specific and unusual sized printing projects.

dpi / Dots-per-inch

Measure of resolution of input devices such as scanners, display devices such as monitors, and output devices such as laser printers, imagesetters and monitors. Abbreviated DPI. Also called dot pitch.

Drill / Drilled

In the printing arena, to drill a whole in a printed matter, eg. swing tags with a pre-drilled hole.

Finish / Finishing

(1) Surface characteristics of paper. (2) General term for trimming, folding, binding and all other post press operations.

Finished Size

Size of product after production is completed, as compared to flat size. Also called trimmed size.

Graphic Design

Arrangement of type and visual elements along with specifications for paper, ink colors and printing processes that, when combined, convey a visual message.

gsm

Grams per square inch, when referring to the weight of paper stock. A lower number, eg. 80gsm means a thinner/lighter stock, while larger numbers apply to heavier stocks, like 420gsm card.

Laser Bond / Laser paper

Bond paper made especially smooth and dry to run well through laser printers.

Offset Printing

Printing technique that transfers ink from a plate to a blanket to paper instead of directly from plate to paper.

Overprint

To print one image over a previously printed image, such as printing type over a screen tint. Also called surprint.

Over Run / Overs

Additional printed matter beyond order. For example, in aa run of 5,000 flyers you may receive around 250 extras.

Perforation

Taking place on a press or a binder machine, creating a line of small dotted holes for the purpose of tearing-off a part of a printed matter (usually straight lines, vertical or horizontal).

Plate

Piece of metal, plastic or rubber carrying an image to be reproduced using a printing press.

PMS

Obsolete reference to Pantone Matching System. The correct trade name of the colors in the Pantone Matching System is Pantone colors, not PMS Colors. Eg. formerly PMS032 is referred to as Pantone 032.

Resolution

Sharpness of an image on film, paper, computer screen, tape or other medium.

Score

To compress paper along a straight line so it folds more easily and accurately. Also called crease.

Self Mailer

A printed item independent of an envelope, eg. a promotional postcards or DL card.

Spot Color or Spot UV Varnish

One ink colour or UV varnish applied to portions of a sheet.

Trim Size

The size of the printed material in it’s finished stage, after folding, trimming, etc.

Uncoated Paper

Paper that has not been coated with clay. Also called offset paper.

Bleed

Printing that extends to the edge of a sheet or page after trimming.

Carbonless Paper

Paper coated with chemicals that enable transfer of images from one sheet to another with pressure from writing or typing.

Press-quality pdf

Final artwork ready for printing, with information for print production, like trim and bleed marks, supplied in a pdf file created with high quality settings.

Vector artwork

Logos and other design elements created in an illustration program, which can be fully edited and/or resized to suit requirements for print and signage, without losing quality.

Rastor artwork

Images which are made up of pixels of colour, as in a digital photo file, and cannot be enlarged without losing quality.

Image resolution explained

December 21, 2011 in brochures, design, flyers and such, postcards and dl cards, printing, the business card blog

Choosing a suitable image for your printing job entails more than simply using a photo that looks good on your screen. Providing your designer with images of sufficient resolution will result in a faster turnaround for your artwork setup, and highest quality print results.

High resolution images suitable for printing hold far more data than screen or web quality images, so a high resolution image file will be far larger in file size than it’s low resolution equivalent.

As an example, a web quality photo 200x100px, approximately 7×3.5cm, will be 72 dpi and only 60kb in file size. If this image is to be printed on a brochure at 7×3.5cm size, it needs to be 300dpi and the file size will be around 1,000kb (1mb).

The sample below shows how a low resolution image will appear in print, compared to a high resolution image.

   

72 dpi resolution – 60kb file size

300dpi resolution – 1,000kb (1mb) file size

For the purpose of providing images for your job, the first step is to ensure your original image has sufficent resolution to print at high quality on the printing press. If you’re using a digital camera, put the quality setting on “high” or “best”. As long as the camera is reasonable quality, using this setting should result in a high resolution image file. Give your designer the image file just as it is off the camera, with no cropping, resizing or editing.

If you’ll be using a professional photographer, check before they start that they’ll be able to provide large, print quality images with sufficient resolution at the intended print size. As a general rule, ask them to shoot at the highest possible resolution as your print designer can easily resize them to smaller sizes as required.

If you’re downloading stock images, choose the appropriate size for your print job based on the final size of the image. If the photo is to be used on a smaller item like a bookmark or small magazine ad, the “medium” size image should be sufficient. If the final image will be any larger than that, you’ll need either “large” or “extra large”.

Need help? Just ask us for advice before buying stock photos so we can help you choose the best option.