Technical GuideMaster Series2 min read

Flexographic Plate Making: From Design File to Print-Ready Plate

Flexographic plate making bridges digital artwork and physical print production. Understanding photopolymer plate types, CTP exposure, and mounting procedures helps converters achieve consistent results.

L
LISHG Engineering Team
December 1, 2025
Flexographic Plate Making: From Design File to Print-Ready Plate
Article overview

Learn how flexographic photopolymer plates are made, exposed, and mounted. Covers CTP imaging, washout, drying, and mounting best practices for CI flexo presses.

flexo plate makingphotopolymer platesCTP flexoflexo plate mountingFlexographic Plate Making: From Design File to Print-Ready Plate
Article Content
In-depth analysis, specifications and editorial commentary

Why Plate Quality Determines Print Quality

The photopolymer plate is the direct interface between digital design and substrate. Every detail in the final print depends on plate quality — from dot sharpness to ink density to registration accuracy.

Digital CTP vs. Analog Plate Making

CTP (Computer-to-Plate) systems use a laser to ablate a thin black mask layer, creating the image without a film negative. Advantages: superior dot sharpness, faster turnaround (4–24 hours vs. 1–3 days), and elimination of film-handling variability. Modern CTP systems achieve 2400–4800 dpi, enabling FM screening for Extended Color Gamut printing.

Step-by-Step Plate Making Process

  1. Back exposure: Brief overall UV from the back polymerizes a foundation layer, setting plate floor depth (controls relief).
  2. Main exposure: UV through the laser-ablated mask polymerizes image areas. Unexposed areas remain soluble.
  3. Washout: Removes unexposed polymer. Thermal washout (heat + blotting fabric) eliminates VOC solvents. Typical relief depth: 0.8–1.5 mm.
  4. Drying: Removes absorbed solvent. Incomplete drying causes plate swelling and inconsistent impression.
  5. Light finishing: UV-A exposure eliminates surface tack to prevent ink buildup during printing.

Plate Mounting Best Practices

Sleeve systems allow plates to be mounted offline while the press runs, reducing changeover time dramatically. Mounting tape hardness (Shore A durometer) affects dot gain — softer tape means more compression and more dot gain. Always match tape specification to application requirements and verify against the plate manufacturer's recommendations.

Common Plate Problems and Solutions

ProblemCauseSolution
Dot bridgingOver-exposure / shallow reliefReduce main exposure; increase back exposure
Highlight dot lossUnder-exposureIncrease main exposure time
Plate swellingIncomplete dryingExtend drying time; verify temperature
Edge chipping on solidsExcessive impression pressureReduce impression; check mounting tape spec

LISHG CI flexo presses support all major photopolymer plate systems including Flint, DuPont Cyrel, MacDermid, and Toyobo. Contact our engineering team for plate specification and mounting parameter guidance.

Technical Q&A

Frequently Asked Questions

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