A First in All-Digital Package Converting

This Texas converter is the first in North America to commercially operate a nanographic press for packaging. Just as impressive, carton creasing and cutting are digital, too.

All four folding cartons shown here were printed on the Landa S10 and then creased and cut on the Highcon Beam, and the run lengths ranged from 2,000 to 10,000 units.
All four folding cartons shown here were printed on the Landa S10 and then creased and cut on the Highcon Beam, and the run lengths ranged from 2,000 to 10,000 units.

Since 1996 Virtual Packaging of Grapevine, Tex., has been providing shelf-appeal consulting as well as packaging prototypes to a wide range of U.S. and international clients. Now those clients want the firm to also produce commercial quantities in addition to prototypes. To do that, management realized they needed to invest in digital technology for both printing and finishing of folding cartons.

“As capable as we were when it came to providing customers with prototypes, we weren’t able to help them when the quantities numbered in the hundreds or a thousand,” says Tara Duckett, VP Sales & Operations. “And we realized no one else was really able to meet requests in those volumes, either, so we knew it was a good opportunity. And the best fit, we felt, was the combination of Landa and Highcon.”

And so it was that in 2019 the firm installed an S10 sheet-fed nanographic press from Landa Digital Printing and a Beam digital cutting and creasing system from Highcon.

“We began looking at digital printing as early as 2000,” adds Virtual Packaging CEO Monty Patterson. “We began with wide format roll-to-roll and flatbed printers. By 2005 we started looking for wider format, the B1 format. It took a while, but by 2016 we started talking with Landa and agreed to purchase a nanographic press in April of that year. And around the same time frame we made a deal with Highcon, too.”

With the installation of the two new pieces of carton converting equipment, Virtual Packaging became what Patterson calls “the first all-digital B1 packaging site in North America.” When asked if it’s risky to wade into such uncharted territory, he has this to say. “It can be. But we ran a lot of numbers and did a lot of analysis. Also, we like being challenged. So there was no doubt in any of our minds that this was the thing to do. We had enough information to know that there was some demand for this, though we couldn’t really attach a finite number to it. Now that we’re into production, the numbers are coming in pretty much where we thought they would. Sales started off a little bit slower than we’d hoped. But the margins were there from the start. And now we expect to see 10 to 20% increases month after month for quite a while.”

Landa S10From left to right in front of the Landa S10, Landa Field Technician Michael Harar joins Virtual Packaging’s VP Press Operator Jose “Pepe” Guerra, VP Sales and Operations Tara Duckett, VP Press Operator Rudy “Romo” Ramirez, VP Production Manager Rafael Guerra, and VP & Administration Jordan Patterson.First in North America
While Virtual Packaging’s move is a big deal for a number of reasons, perhaps what’s most notable is that it represents the very first installation of a Landa S10 nanographic press in North America. The nanographic printing process, also called nanography, differs from other printing technologies because it uses an innovative system that employs Landa NanoInk colorants, a proprietary water-based ink with nano-pigment particles that measure tens of nanometers in size. Unlike ink-jet printing, where ink-jets put the image directly onto the substrate, nanography is essentially an offset process. The Landa NanoInk dispersions are ejected onto a unique heated blanket, and only then is the ink transferred from the blanket to the substrate in the form of an ultra-thin film. Substrates, it should be noted, can be of the off-the-shelf variety requiring no pre-treatment or priming.

Landa claims that nanography offers unprecedented dot sharpness and color uniformity compared to ink-jet or offset lithography, because its high-resolution ink ejectors deliver 1200 dpi resolution, high coverage, multiple gray levels, and exceptional color definition. As for throughput, it’s an impressive 13,000 B1 sheets (1000 X 707 mm, 39.37 x 27.83 in) per hour, though at this point Virtual Packaging operates closer to 6,500 sheets as it awaits an upgrade.

Like other Landa Nanographic Printing Presses, the S10 is equipped with Landa’s Active Quality Management (AQM). Developed by Landa with AVT, Techkon, and EFI, it’s a fully automatic solution that scans each printed sheet, identifies defects (color inconsistency, issues with print uniformity or registration, missing nozzles), and initiates corrective action where applicable—all without any operator intervention.

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