Congress programme to demonstrate print opportunities

Throughout the three-day Congress, CEOs from across the globe will chart the future for the industry and celebrate the magic of magazines. Organisers says that in keeping with this theme the Congress programme includes enhanced printing effects and interactive features to demonstrate to publishers how innovative print publications can heighten reader engagement and unlock revenue potential.

Some of the methods used in the Congress programme include a triple gate fold cover, thermochromic and scratch and sniff effects and printed codes in the text offering immediate connection to internet sites via a mobile phone.

In addition, the programme features a range of tactile and visual enhancements including UV protective coatings, Dayglo florescent inks, cold foil and soft touch effects, pearlescent coatings, hexachrome printing and the use of translucent paper printed on both sides for added dimension and interest.

Advancements in digital printing, smart inks, RFID and hybrid printed electronic media, together with the transformation of printing from an analogue-based craft to a digital technology industry, have enabled enriched conventional printing and other technologies to converge – offering an exciting future for the magazine industry.

The PPA adds that the World Magazine Congress programme, which has been produced with support from members of the PrintCity and PPA partnership, demonstrates just some of the ways paper can reposition itself as an innovative and integral part of a multi-platform strategy. PrintCity Alliance members and partners involved in this joint project with the PPA include: UPM, Sun Chemical, manroland, Leonhard Kurz, Merck, Hammesfahr, D&S – Alexander Dort, UpCode, Reproflex and Polestar, printing at its Polestar Wheatons site.

Sarah Tunstall, Chief Operating Officer f the PPA says, “Print appeals to the senses in ways that cannot be reached by other media, offering endless combinations of colours, surface treatments, shapes, substrates and smells, all of which appeal to a reader’s senses to create emotional value.”

She continues, “Unlike digital media, printing is an infinitely variable, 3-dimensional medium that allows magazine publishers to differentiate their products — by size, touch, feel and perception — to suit a specific audience and purpose. This results in exciting and valuable possibilities for advertisers.”

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