Interprint brings multi-colour work in-house with Shinohara buy
Interprint has brought the majority of its four-colour work in-house by investing in a Shinohara 66 press.
The company, a division of Norfolk County Services, is housing the machine in its new premises in Norwich, and is producing a range of multi-colour work including brochures and folders.
Interprint, which has a turnover in excess of £1.7m, was previously carrying out work on a range of single and two-colour Heidelberg presses and has experienced significant time savings with the new Shinohara.
Manager Tony Matless said: "A job that would previously have taken us around 10 hours is now taking three or four."
He added: "The press is absorbing a lot of the work we were previously sending out to other printers, this machine will help save on those costs."
Interprint prints for Norfolk County Council and commercial clients, such as those in healthcare and education, and Matless anticipates the new four-colour will help attract additional work.
"We are now in a position to produce higher quality colour print as well as providing a prompt service to many council departments," he said.
Matless: hopes the buy will lead to further work
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Comments
ian dodds - 21 July 2008
How is it possible that Interprint can carry out commercial work when they are part of the County Council? If I were a commecial printer in the Norfolk area I would be most upset about paying rates to the county for them to subsidise a 'commercial' print operation!
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