The Ghent Workgroup (GWG) today announces a new commercial print landing page on the gwg.org web site. This area consolidates all relevant information for creatives, publishers, and printers dealing with advertisements and commercial print work.
The Ghent Workgroup was started as far back as 2002 when it became necessary to define PDF standards, mostly for the exchange of advertisements, and because PDF was used more and more in the commercial print sector. “This is where the roots of the GWG lie,” says Christian Blaise, marketing officer of the Ghent Workgroup, and founder & CEO at agileStreams, “Over the years we’ve developed lots of documentation and tools for creatives, publishers and printers, and we wanted to make it easier for people to find those”.
The new area on the website (https://www.gwg.org/commercial-print/) contains lots of interesting information, all of which is available free of charge (as everything on the Ghent Workgroup web site).
Application Settings
The application settings area provides PDF creation settings for design applications and preflight profiles for preflight applications and workflow tools. They help to create the best possible PDF file, or to check that PDF files are production-ready.
Webinar recording
A PDF & PDF/X webinar recording provides a quick introduction into the Ghent Workgroup, the PDF/X ISO standard and the GWG specifications built on that ISO standard. There is of course a much wider range of recordings available on the Ghent Workgroup website (www.gwg.org/watch-gwg-webinar/) on topics such as color, packaging, digital print, sign & display.
PDF/X Workflow Guide
The “PDF/X Workflow Guide” is a comprehensive user guide explaining which Ghent Workgroup specifications exist and what the difference between them are. The document also contains plenty of highly practical information if you need to create good PDF documents.
Ghent Output Suite
The Ghent Output Suite focuses on making sure that your software or hardware is capable up to the task of correctly displaying or outputting PDF files. In this area you’ll also find guidelines on how to configure software or workflows in order to handle modern PDF files correctly.
For software or hardware developers, there is also a link to the technical documents describing the actual GWG specifications. Naturally the content of these is highly technical and not intended for a broad audience.
The preceding press release was provided by a company unaffiliated with Printing Impressions. The views expressed within do not directly reflect the thoughts or opinions of the staff of Printing Impressions.