Wilcor Customers Ask....

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Q

Do you only work with customers in your area?

A

No. We work with customers all over the U.S. The digital age has made the whole country just down the street. 

Q

I have existing film flats from previous press runs that I have to get into a new catalog that exists only on a disk. I no longer have the originals the film was made from. Is there any way Wilcor Graphics can turn MY PRINT NEGATIVES into electronic media? If you can, that will be a trick.

A

We can do it. Wilcor can convert four color separated negs, single color, or whatever you need. We can convert practically any print negs from previous projects to electronic media and manipulate color or text as we would original digital input.

Q

Everybody tells me Wilcor Graphics is the place to go if I have a tough envelope deadline to meet. How many envelopes can you produce in a day?

A

We currently run two envelope presses in our Envelope Department. One is a Diamond envelope press rated at up to 70,000 #10's per hour. (Three operators are usually required at this speed.) The other is a Jet envelope press rated at up to 60,000 per hour. Actual production speeds usually run between 19,000 and 45,000 depending on size and style of envelope being printed.
We print all sizes and styles from 3-1/4 to 18x20 and operate two shifts a day.

Q

How fast can Wilcor Graphics turn my rush 4-color printing order?

A

Fast. With Wilcor Graphics' state-of-the-art technology your ready-to-go digital file can go directly from computer to plate in minutes and fill an open press spot within hours for the most modern production of the high quality printing your customer looks to you for. This is also true for a 5th or 6th color.

Q

I know from experience your saddle-stitched book prices and service are the best, but how do you do it? Constantly meet all those deadlines?

A

We do a lot of saddle-stitched publications, and the secret to getting them all out on schedule is not making one wait until the one in front of it is finished. We keep six binding machines going all the time to eliminate the common problem of lines forming to get to them.