US648285A - Process of superimposing printing-inks. - Google Patents

Process of superimposing printing-inks. Download PDF

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Publication number
US648285A
US648285A US72785199A US1899727851A US648285A US 648285 A US648285 A US 648285A US 72785199 A US72785199 A US 72785199A US 1899727851 A US1899727851 A US 1899727851A US 648285 A US648285 A US 648285A
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colors
inks
strength
printing
color
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US72785199A
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Iwan Orloff
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M1/00Inking and printing with a printer's forme
    • B41M1/14Multicolour printing
    • B41M1/18Printing one ink over another

Definitions

  • the object of my invention is to provide a process which allows of transferring but singly the color or ink from a fresh colored or inked surface to another similar surface by the contact of both surfaces, so as to superimpose upon each other on the latter both colors or inks in a moist condition, no transfer of color or ink taking place from the latter to the former surface.
  • the color or ink .from a third fresh-colored surface to the surface already provided with two layers of colors or inks a threefold layer of colors or inks will be deposited on the latter, a retrogressive transfer of colors or inks from the same to the former being again excluded.
  • my invention allows of assembling on a common surface a plurality of layers of colors or inksin a moist condition, successively transferred thereto by contact from a plurality of individual colorsurfaces, no retrogressive transfer of any color or ink taking place from the assemblingsurface to the latter.
  • the several copies of one impression will successively change the color tone, which finally degenerates into a uniformly-smurched gray tint.
  • r yellow ink will be transferred to'the red-ink colors to be printed with different degrees of strength, imprinting first'the color of greatest strength and the other colors in succession as their strength decreases. If intended to perform the impression in the usual succession of the several colors, the latter are to be prepared with degrees of strength decreasing, re spectively, in the same succession.
  • My invention is not limited to any mode'of preparing colors or inks of different degrees of strength.
  • the common printing inks andjcolors'this object will be generally and preferablyattained by conveniently regulating the proportion of varnish contained therein, and under same conditions in other respects the strength of a color or ink decreases in the measure as the proportion of varnish
  • the degree of strength is not throughout the same for any colors which may contain the same percentage of varnish; but it will easily be possible by experience to find for any color the proportion of varnish needed to give it a predetermined degree of strength, and thus arrange any number of colors in a given suc cession of strength. 7 1
  • the material to'be printed upon in accordance with my invention it will be obviously subjected to somewhat other conditions than in printing with common inks, owing to the greater amount of'varnish contained in the inks prepared after my invention.
  • the said material being of sufiicient resistance or provided with a convenient surface to Withstand the influence of the colors successively transferred thereto and the increasing quantity of varnish deposited therewith (as metal, stone, earthenware, glass, pasteboard, and the like) the several colors may be successively and immediately printed thereupon; but if they are to be printed upon soft or flexible material-say the several kinds of paper.the latter cannot withstand the above influences, as it would warp and dilate under the increasing deposit of varnish from one impression to the following one, so as to trouble the exact register absolutely needed for multicolor-work.
  • the surface upon: which the inks or colors are assembled I shall term the assemblingsurface
  • the assemblingsurface maybe the surface of the article to be printed or-it' maybe any intermediate sur- .faceupon which thecolors are assembled preparatory to transferring them to the article to be printed.
  • a machine upon which my present invention may be practiced is illustrated in United States Patent No. 632,322, for multicolor-printing press, granted to me on September 5, 1899. In said machine the colors are assembled on a smooth plate and afterward transferred to a paper'surface at a single im pression; i

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Description

NITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
IWAN ORLOFF, OF ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA.
PROCESS OF SUPERIMPOSING PRINTING-INKS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 648,285, dated April 24, 1900. Application filed August 19, 1899. Serial No. 727,851. (No specimens.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, IWAN ORLOFF, a subject of the Russian Emperor, residing at St. Pe-
tersburg, Russia, have invented a new and useful Process of Superimposing or Imprinting upon each other a Plurality of Colors or Printing-Inks in a Moist Condition, of which the followingis a specification.
The object of my invention is to provide a process which allows of transferring but singly the color or ink from a fresh colored or inked surface to another similar surface by the contact of both surfaces, so as to superimpose upon each other on the latter both colors or inks in a moist condition, no transfer of color or ink taking place from the latter to the former surface. By further transferring after my invention the color or ink .from a third fresh-colored surface to the surface already provided with two layers of colors or inks a threefold layer of colors or inks will be deposited on the latter, a retrogressive transfer of colors or inks from the same to the former being again excluded. Thus by continuing as described my invention allows of assembling on a common surface a plurality of layers of colors or inksin a moist condition, successively transferred thereto by contact from a plurality of individual colorsurfaces, no retrogressive transfer of any color or ink taking place from the assemblingsurface to the latter.
By applying my invention to the printing art I overcome twogreat inconveniences hitherto inherent to that artthat is to say, the difficulty met with in the inking of printingforms in general, and especially in multicolorprinting, and the impossibility of successfully imprinting upon each other several colors in a moist condition.
' When inking a printing-form by means of a plurality of form-rollers, as usual, with one and the same ink, I have found that the ink to be supplied by the second and the following form-rollers Will not be fully transferred from the latter to the printing-form, While, on the other hand, a retrogressive transfer of inks takes place from the printing-form inked by the first roller to the following form-rollers. Thus the quantity of ink deposited on the form-rollers could not be fully assembled on the printing-form, nor the full effect of an inking device comprising a plurality of formrollers ever be obtained. Hitherto, for instance,'a printing-form by means of even four form-rollers cannot be inked with much more intensity than the rollers themselves and never with a greater intensity of color than the rollers even though employing any greater number of rollers, while by using my invention a form is fully inked by but tworollers, and anyroller to be added will raise the intensity of ink on the form above that on the rollers. This feature of my invention is of importance for unicolor art-printing, and es pecially for printing unicolor half-tones.
In multicolor-printing, for the same reason as stated heretofore, it has been hitherto impossible to imprint fresh colors upon each other, and thereby obtain an unvaried clean color tone throughout the copies of one impression, as, first, when imprinting the second color upon the first one the former is not fully transferred to the latter, and, second, the first color will be partially transferred back to the second color-plate, this twofold defect occurring on the impression of each following color. In consequence thereof the surface to be printed upon does not receive the due quantity of each color to give the proper color tone required, while at the same time the colors of the several color-forms are soiled and clouded by the retrogressive transfer of colors, so as to more and more change their proper color tone and for their part transfer clouded colors to the impression=surface instead of the proper clean colors they should transfer. Thus the several copies of one impression will successively change the color tone, which finally degenerates into a uniformly-smurched gray tint. Now I have discovered that by the contact of two fresh colored or inked surfaces a mutual transfer of the colors from and to either surface does not take place, excepting in the case of both colors or inks being of the same strength, this word being understood by the craft to designate thatquality of colors which results from the respective proportions of their viscosity, consistence, and adhesive power, but that by the contact of two sur* faces provided with colors or inks or difierent strength the color of less strength passes over to that of greater strength. Thus, for instance, by rolling a red-inked roller over a yellow-inked form the red ink will be transferred to the yellow form if the yellow ink is that of greater strength, and, vice versa, the
' contained therein increases.
r yellow ink will be transferred to'the red-ink colors to be printed with different degrees of strength, imprinting first'the color of greatest strength and the other colors in succession as their strength decreases. If intended to perform the impression in the usual succession of the several colors, the latter are to be prepared with degrees of strength decreasing, re spectively, in the same succession. a
When applying my invention to unicolorprinting-say for deeply inking the printing form or forms bynleans of a plurality of formrollers-the ink or single color to be printed is to be prepared with different degrees of.
strength in order to supply the ink of the greatest strength to the first form-roller and respectively inks of successively-decreasing strength to the second and the following formrollers.
My invention is not limited to any mode'of preparing colors or inks of different degrees of strength. As to the common printing inks andjcolors'this objectwill be generally and preferablyattained by conveniently regulating the proportion of varnish contained therein, and under same conditions in other respects the strength of a color or ink decreases in the measure as the proportion of varnish However, the degree of strength is not throughout the same for any colors which may contain the same percentage of varnish; but it will easily be possible by experience to find for any color the proportion of varnish needed to give it a predetermined degree of strength, and thus arrange any number of colors in a given suc cession of strength. 7 1
As to the material to'be printed upon in accordance with my invention it will be obviously subjected to somewhat other conditions than in printing with common inks, owing to the greater amount of'varnish contained in the inks prepared after my invention. In the case of the said material being of sufiicient resistance or provided with a convenient surface to Withstand the influence of the colors successively transferred thereto and the increasing quantity of varnish deposited therewith (as metal, stone, earthenware, glass, pasteboard, and the like) the several colors may be successively and immediately printed thereupon; but if they are to be printed upon soft or flexible material-say the several kinds of paper.the latter cannot withstand the above influences, as it would warp and dilate under the increasing deposit of varnish from one impression to the following one, so as to trouble the exact register absolutely needed for multicolor-work. To avoid these inconveniences when using my invention for printing-on paper or a similar material, the several colors are not to be immediately and successively printed upon the paper, but previfm'em b'er transfer plates or rollers of roller composition, rubber, orleather preferably are made use of. N V, r
The surface upon: which the inks or colors are assembled I shall term the assemblingsurface As above stated, the assemblingsurface maybe the surface of the article to be printed or-it' maybe any intermediate sur- .faceupon which thecolors are assembled preparatory to transferring them to the article to be printed. A machine upon which my present invention may be practiced is illustrated in United States Patent No. 632,322, for multicolor-printing press, granted to me on September 5, 1899. In said machine the colors are assembled on a smooth plate and afterward transferred to a paper'surface at a single im pression; i
What Ido claim as my invention, and desire-to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. The herein-described process of superimposing inks or colors in a moist condition by surface contact, which consists in preparing the inks or colors with different degrees of strength, and in successively transferring the same to an assembling-surface in the order in which their strength decreases, substantially as and for the purposes described.
2. The herein-described process of super- .imposing inks or colors in a moist condition by surface contact, which consists in preparing the inks or colors with different degrees of strength, in successively transferring the same to an assembling-surface in the order in which their strength decreases, and finally in simultaneously transferring the assembled inks or colors from the said assembling-surface to the surface intended to ultimately receive the superimposed inks or colors, substantially as and for the purposes described.
3. The hereiii described process of superimposing inks or colors in a moist condition by surface contact, which consists in preparing the inks or colorswith difierent degrees of strength, in successively transferring the same to an assembling-surface in, the order in which their strength decreases, the said assembling-surface consisting of a material undergoing no deformation under the transfer-pressurenor under the influence of the moisture of the inks or colors transferred, and finally in simultaneously transferring the assembled inks or colors from the said assembling-surface to the surface intended to ultimately receive the superimposedinks or colors, substantially as and for the purposes described.
In witness whereoflhave hereunto set my hand in presence of two witnesses. c
IWAN ORLOFF.
I Witnesses:
N. TsoHENALoF'rLL,
ously and successively transferred to an in- J. BLAU.
US72785199A 1899-08-19 1899-08-19 Process of superimposing printing-inks. Expired - Lifetime US648285A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4854232A (en) * 1986-10-13 1989-08-08 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co. Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-color printing

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4854232A (en) * 1986-10-13 1989-08-08 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co. Ltd. Method and apparatus for multi-color printing

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