g/m2
- Abbreviation of grams per metre. A method of indicating
the substance of paper or board (whatever the size of
the paper/board or number of sheets in the package)
on the basis of weight in grams per square metre.
Galley
proof - proofs taken from the galleys
before being made up into pages.
Galleys
- the printing term for long metal trays used
to hold type after it had been set and before the press
run.
Ganging-up
- Imposing different images on a sheet to
save make-readies. Different ratios of images can be
used to create different quantities; for instance a
sheet of 8 images can be printed 4:3:1, so each 1,000
printed sheets would contain 4,000 of image one, 3,000
of image two and 1,000 of image three.
Gatefold
- an oversize page where both sides fold into the gutter
in overlapping layers. Used to accommodate maps into
books. (For more information on folds, please refer
to Folding Techniques Menu under Print Workshop)
Gathering
- the operation of inserting the printed pages, sections
or signatures of a book in the correct order for binding.
GEM
- Digital Research's Graphics Environment Manager. A
graphical interface designed both to make the operation
of software simpler for the non-expert and to allow
programs to communicate with one another. Two key desktop
publishing packages, Ventura and DR's own GEM Desktop
Publisher operate under this environment.
Ghosting
- a faint printed image that appears on a printed sheet
where it was not intended. More often than not this
problem is a function of graphical design. It is hard
to tell when or where ghosting will occur. Sometimes
the problem can be seen developing immediately after
printing the sheet, other times the problem occurs while
drying. However the problem occurs it is sometimes costly
to fix, if it can be fixed. Occasionally it can be eliminated
by changing the colour sequence, the inks, the paper,
changing to a press with a drier, printing the problem
area in a separate pass through the press or changing
the racking (reducing the number of sheets on the drying
racks).
Gloss
ink - for use in litho and letterpress
printing on coated papers where the ink will dry without
penetration.
Golden
ratio - the rule devised to give proportions
of height to width when laying out text and illustrations
to produce the most optically pleasing result.
Grain
- the direction in which the paper fibre lie.
Gravure
- a rotary printing process where the image is etched
into the metal plate attached to a cylinder. The cylinder
is then rotated through a trough of printing ink after
which the etched surface is wiped clean by a blade leaving
the non-image area clean. The paper is then passed between
two rollers and pressed against the etched cylinder
drawing the ink out by absorption.
Greeking
- a software device where areas of grey are used to
simulate lines of text. One of desktop publishing's
less clever methods of getting round the slowness of
high resolution displays on the PC.
Grey
scale - a range of luminance values
for evaluating shading through white to black. Frequently
used in discussions about scanners as a measure of their
ability to capture halftone images. Basically the more
levels the better but with correspondingly larger memory
requirements.
Grid
- A systematic division of a page into areas to enable
designers to ensure consistency. The grid acts as a
measuring guide and shows text, illustrations and trim
sizes.
Grind-Off
- The area which runs along the spine of each
section (signature) of a perfect bound book which is
removed after being gathered to allow the glue to penetrate
every leaf. The UK standard grind-off dimension
is 3mm.
Gripper
- device on a printing machine for holding the sheet
during the printing or finishing process.
GSM
- Grams per square metre. The unit of measurement for
paper weight.
Guard
- a narrow strip of paper or linen pasted to a single
leaf to allow sewing into a section for binding.
Gutter
- the central blank area between left and right pages
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