Packaging printers and prepress specialists today are looking to get more out of their flexo production. New technologies and techniques are driving flexo to a higher standard for packaging printing, transitioning flexo from craft-based to a more standardized, sustainable manufacturing process.
In the last 4 years, the packaging printing industry has been through constant change due to various pressures including Covid, supply chain crisis and inflation. While these pressures have begun to stabilize, brands continue to focus on continuity of supply, driving more efficient SKUs, as well as prioritizing sustainability to protect the environment, which is driven by the consumer. The needs of the brands are creating increasing requirements for printers to be more efficient and sustainable in their production.
Fortunately, at the same time, new technologies and techniques are driving flexo to a higher standard for packaging printing. Flexo is evolving from its ‘traditional’ capabilities, practices and processes to a new era of what we at Miraclon call modern flexo that is a standardized, sustainable manufacturing process. The lack of skills in the industry, combined with the pressures on printers to increase yields and implement sustainability improvements necessitates less ‘craft’, and more efficient, intervention-free printing that can cope with the full range of client demands.
Modern Flexo — standardized and sustainable manufacturing
Modern flexo describes a production state where
- Flexo can achieve visual parity with gravure, offset and digital.
- Results are consistent and predictable enough to enable printing by numbers.
- Jobs are printed with as few colors as possible (more process, less spots)
- Print conditions offer wide print latitude and facilitate clean printing.
- Outcomes can be optimized in more challenging environments, including — crucially — with more sustainable materials.
As a result, printers that implement modern flexo benefit from increased uptime, less troubleshooting, reduced waste, and more efficient job scheduling. They are positioned to commercialize more sustainable offerings and compete for work traditionally printed with other print processes.
The plate is the catalyst
While implementing modern flexo practices requires collaborative effort between the printer and their key suppliers — press, ink and anilox manufacturers and prepress providers have all innovated steadily over the last decade and a half — it is the flexo plate that sits at the center of the flexographic print process. The plate brings together substrates, inks, tape and anilox, influencing press capability and results, and is the key enabler of best-in-class flexo printing that is highly consistent in the press room.
Miraclon is a key enabler of Modern Flexo, through our innovative and differentiated FLEXCEL NX Technology and applications expertise.
Our proprietary FLEXCEL NX technology makes possible the ultimate control of ink transfer on which modern flexo is founded, and which is enabled by advanced plate surface patterning. The surface of a FLEXCEL NX plate incorporates digitally imaged surface channels that enable the ink to flow. The channels are just 4-6 microns wide — there are 6 channels in the width of a human hair — and can be modified for different applications and different combinations of presses, substrates, inks and aniloxes. Advanced plate surface patterning can only be achieved through Miraclon’s unique imaging and plate making technology that eliminates variables from the plate making process.
Continuing innovation
Over the years successive iterations of our plate surface patterning technology have brought new levels of control in ink transfer, improving the quality, predictability and consistency of flexo printing. The scanning electron microscope (SEM) images in the illustration below clearly show the progression.