How to Make Great Photocopies
Updated:2008/04/28
How to Make Great Photocopies
Here a few tricks of the trade known only to those who work at copy
centers. These tips will help you get better results and have less
problems when using copiers.
Steps
- Select the right paper for the job. General copies (home use or
rough drafts) can be printed on 20 lb paper. Use inkjet paper for
inkjet copiers and laser paper for laser machines. Multi-purpose
paper is ok also and may work in several types of machines. 24 lb
paper is good for more professional or business documents. Photo or
glossy paper is best for photos. Paper weights or thicknesses are
20, 22, 24, 28, 32, 50-60 lb+.
- Get the highest brightness number on the package for the
whitest paper. Numbers range from about 84 brightness to over 100.
A lot of today's paper is acid-free but check the label to be
sure.
- Stack and neaten papers to be copied with your hands and check
that there are no edges sticking out, folded, stapled, torn, or
loosely taped. Smooth paper feeds easily through the machine and
has less chance of getting jammed or damaged.
- Place the copies in the top feeder (usually face/print side up)
or place the document on the glass (face/print down) beside the
arrow. There should be paper size guides on the sides to help you.
Adjust any trays to your size paper. If the item to be copied is
small, place a white sheet behind the item to avoid using excess
ink or getting gray or black shadows on copies.
- Choose the correct drawer/tray where the paper will be pulled
from. Most copiers can use letter (8.5x11) legal (8.5x14) or ledger
(11x17) size. There is also a side feeder tray for heavy weight
paper such as glossy photo paper or greeting card stock. Do not put
this type of paper in the bottom trays. (Paper will jam and could
damage the machine.) This paper must be run through slowly and on a
heavyweight, glossy, or card stock setting. Transparencies should
also use this tray, and have a special machine setting. Since
transparencies are clear, the machine may not recognize them unless
a transparency setting is selected.
- Select the lightness or darkness by pressing a button. News
print, color to black and white, or photos will need to be
lightened. Light text, light colors, or pencil drawings need to be
darkened to show up well.
- For photos, use the photo setting on the machine. This will
give the best detail.
- Some copiers will automatically collate, staple, or hole punch.
Check the appropriate setting for what you need.
- Remember that copies print best from a white or light pastel
colored original. Deep color originals (red, green, purple, blue)
will copy gray and will be unreadable. Use white originals to print
on color paper.
- To avoid spots or smudges on copies, clean the glass or use
white out on your original before copying.
- Select the number of copies or sets you need.
- Press the large copy button (usually green). If something goes
wrong, there is usually a red stop button, but it may take the
machine a few seconds to stop. If the machine needs more info, an
error message will pop up or if paper has become jammed, the
machine will show you the area and may have steps to follow to
clear the trapped page and continue.
- Adjust settings in the machine if your copy is not how you like
it. Pages that have been ripped out of a notebook (torn edges) can
be moved over or there may be a margin shift button on the machine
to make a better copy.
Tips
- Use cover up tape, correction fluid (white out) or tape white
paper over areas you don't want to copy. Always be sure to tape all
edges down so nothing will get pulled off in the machine.
- Copies are as good as your original. If your original is in
good shape, the copies will be also. If your original is already
too dark, too light, has typos, or is a bad quality photo, the
machine will not be able to fix this. Use another document or
photo. Damaged photos can be scanned and edited by using computer
software.
- Some copiers have a book mode or are able to make multiple
images on a page. Also check copy options to reduce and enlarge if
needed.
- If a photo is too red, (age/faded) you can lower the color
magenta in the copy settings. It may be under the hue/color
saturation setting. Cool adds more blue, warm adds more red.
Special red-eye pens (check the camera/photo dept of a store) can
darken the eyes in pictures.
- If copying a newspaper or magazine article with images on the
back side (which may appear as ghosted images on your copies),
first place your original on the glass of the copier and then place
something dark (or red, as copiers see red as black or dark grey)
on top of the sheet before you close the cover. This will even out
the colors on the backside and prevent the images appearing as
ghosts on your copies.
Warnings
- If you are copying onto transparencies, ensure that you use
transparencies speficically marked "for copiers". These
transparencies are made of plastic that can handle the high
internal temperature of a photocopier. Cheaper transparencies will
melt onto the machinery and require that a new drum be purchased.
Depending on the copier, this will cost $500 to $3000.
- Let white out dry completely before copying. The liquid will
stick to the copy glass and make spots on copies and is hard to
clean off the copier.
- Staples, tape, torn pages, etc. need to be removed or repaired
before making copies. Any loose ends or jagged edges will get stuck
in the machine or damage your original. Staples can also scratch
the copy glass.
- Books, magazines, cd covers, sports cards, etc. and other items
that can be purchased are usually copyrighted. Check the front,
back or bottom of items for copyright info. Government forms,
driver's licenses, passports, and other legal documents may have
special rules for copying. Check with your state laws. These items
should not be copied unless the info says it's ok. Copy centers are
not allowed to print things without written consent or other
permission from the one who created the item, or article. In
certain circumstances, teachers, students, or the media may print a
few pages of an item. This is called "fair use." Check this out
before copying.
- Professional posed or studio pictures are also copyrighted by
the photographer or company (even if you purchased them) and will
usually say 'do not copy' on the back. Some photographers allow you
to purchase the copyright and use these photos as you wish.