The new matte black ink is especially suited for warehouse
and manufacturing environments printing shipping or barcode labels. ColorWorks
C6000-Series customers now have the option to choose from gloss black
UltraChrome® DL ink or matte black UltraChrome DL ink, which are both BS5609
certified1 and highly durable pigment-based inks. In comparison, the gloss
black ink is designed to print on a wider variety of substrates while the matte
black ink offers darker black text and images on matte media. The same cyan,
magenta and yellow inks are used with both blacks.
“Many businesses are realizing the traditional, two-step
printing process that consists of purchasing thousands of pre-printed labels
and adding variable black text via monochrome thermal printing is outdated and
inefficient,” said Bonny Rindahl, product manager, Commercial Labels, Epson
America, Inc. “Whether producing complex informational labels, shipping labels
or high-quality product labels, Epson understands the importance of having
versatile ink options to best suit the labeling application.”
The ColorWorks CW-C6500P, CW-C6500A, CW-C6000P and CW-C6000A
are engineered for mission-critical applications and are the first printers
specifically designed as a color upgrade to black-only thermal transfer
printers.2 The CW-C6500P and CW-C6000P are the first ever color inkjet printers
to support peel-and-present capabilities for fast hand or automated label
application,3 and the CW-C6500A and CW-C6000A include an auto cutter to create
variable length labels and enable easy job separation. Widely used for
on-demand manufacturing and warehouse label printing, the ColorWorks
C6000-Series, coupled with the new matte black ink, is designed to produce
high-quality labels with rich images and dark blacks.
Availability
The ColorWorks C6000-Series on-demand color label printers
in matte and gloss options, as well as supplies, are available through
authorized resellers. For additional information, visit
https://epson.com/colorworks. A video featuring the warehousing labeling
capabilities can be found on Epson’s YouTube.
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