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Printing Bar Codes (contrast) white ink on Manilla
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I am currently printing bar codes, but wondered if contrast was an issue. Could you print a white bar code on brown cardboard? Or does anyone know where on the t'internet I could find the info?
Many thanks in advance.
Many thanks in advance.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by nellypope. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have seen black barcodes printed on manilla boxes. Granted, most of them are on unit packs eg cereal cases, but it's obviously possible to scan them.
ChuckFickens, as I understand it the colour is immaterial. A printer can make any colour from the colours in the cartridge including white. I've printed in white on coloured paper before now on at least three printers including inkjet models.
The fact that the printer has not got white ink in it makes no difference - if it did, those of us with tricolour magenta/cyan/yellow cartridges would not be able to print in black, green or a myriad of other colours!
ChuckFickens, as I understand it the colour is immaterial. A printer can make any colour from the colours in the cartridge including white. I've printed in white on coloured paper before now on at least three printers including inkjet models.
The fact that the printer has not got white ink in it makes no difference - if it did, those of us with tricolour magenta/cyan/yellow cartridges would not be able to print in black, green or a myriad of other colours!
MTbowels,
You are incorrect.
You can not make white by mixing other colour inks. to print white you need a white ink cartridge which are only available for expensive commercial printers
Nellypope, if you are sending them to a commercial printers they may be able to print white, best check first though.
You are incorrect.
You can not make white by mixing other colour inks. to print white you need a white ink cartridge which are only available for expensive commercial printers
Nellypope, if you are sending them to a commercial printers they may be able to print white, best check first though.
just to clarify a little.
Printers use colour subtraction for making other colours, the primary colours used for this are normally cyan, magenta and yellow. using colour subtraction it is impossible to make white. imagine you had a pot of cyan paint, one of magenta and one of yellow. try and think of what possible way you could mix those paints to make white. it's impossible and if you mix all three you will get black.
Explained why and how here
http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfadd/1160/Ch23RR/Sub. html
the other method of mixing colours is colour addition, this deals with the mixiing of coloured lights. the normal primary colours for this are red, green and blue. with colour addition then if you mix all three coloured lights you get white light.
this should explain colour addition a bit more, and the two little animations right at the bottom show the difference in results of mixing colours using either subtraction (ink) or addition (light)
Printers use colour subtraction for making other colours, the primary colours used for this are normally cyan, magenta and yellow. using colour subtraction it is impossible to make white. imagine you had a pot of cyan paint, one of magenta and one of yellow. try and think of what possible way you could mix those paints to make white. it's impossible and if you mix all three you will get black.
Explained why and how here
http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfadd/1160/Ch23RR/Sub. html
the other method of mixing colours is colour addition, this deals with the mixiing of coloured lights. the normal primary colours for this are red, green and blue. with colour addition then if you mix all three coloured lights you get white light.
this should explain colour addition a bit more, and the two little animations right at the bottom show the difference in results of mixing colours using either subtraction (ink) or addition (light)
Chuck right, can't make white
white is an absence of owt else.unless it's an added pigment (not in printers.
As I understand the scanning thing - it is contrast .... as such ... but it's what the laser can "see"
the laser is red ... so you need to think what colours show light and dark in red light
(it's also a problem with milti-coloured mouse mats and laser mouses (mice... meece?).
look at this - red, green and blue light only
http://i36.tinypic.com/2u7r68j.jpg
white is an absence of owt else.unless it's an added pigment (not in printers.
As I understand the scanning thing - it is contrast .... as such ... but it's what the laser can "see"
the laser is red ... so you need to think what colours show light and dark in red light
(it's also a problem with milti-coloured mouse mats and laser mouses (mice... meece?).
look at this - red, green and blue light only
http://i36.tinypic.com/2u7r68j.jpg
Perhaps this will help explain things. You know those little bottles of food colouring you can buy in the supermarket - if you buy one of each of the primary colours that are in your injet printer (cyan, magenta and yellow) Within reason you can combine these to turn white icing into most colours. Use nothing and the icing is still white or use everything and the icing will go a black-brown colour. Use a couple of drops of red and blue and you'll get purple and so on.
But if you start with black icing, there's nothing you can add that will make it anything but black.
It's the same with your inkjet printer - because white is obtained by not having any ink print on the white paper. But of course that only works when the paper is white and you'll get different results on all colours of paper, decreasing as the paper gets darker in colour. Print blue on yellow paper and you should get green printing.
The only way to print in white is to do what commercial printers do - use opaque inks and include a white ink in the process. And as far as I know there's no commercial ink that will do that with an inkjet printer.
Or if you still don't believe me.
http://word.tips.net/Pages/T000848_Printing_in _White.html
http://desktoppub.about.com/cs/printing/f/whit e_ink.htm
But if you start with black icing, there's nothing you can add that will make it anything but black.
It's the same with your inkjet printer - because white is obtained by not having any ink print on the white paper. But of course that only works when the paper is white and you'll get different results on all colours of paper, decreasing as the paper gets darker in colour. Print blue on yellow paper and you should get green printing.
The only way to print in white is to do what commercial printers do - use opaque inks and include a white ink in the process. And as far as I know there's no commercial ink that will do that with an inkjet printer.
Or if you still don't believe me.
http://word.tips.net/Pages/T000848_Printing_in _White.html
http://desktoppub.about.com/cs/printing/f/whit e_ink.htm
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