The most prevalent kind of banner and signage printing used today is probably vinyl printing. You will send your sign maker a pattern or outline with the colors you would like to use when you use vinyl. The vinyl is loaded into a special machine and the pattern you have chosen will be cut.
It is called offset because it does not directly transfer the ink to the paper. Because offset presses run so efficiently once set up, when larger quantities are required, offset printing is the best choice and provides accurate color reproduction and crisp , clean, professional-looking printing.
FedEx-Kinkos is probably a pretty good bet if you don't have access to a local printer. Printing [black & white] on your own paper is also just about $0.10 per page! Some quantities of paper, including colored cardstock, are sold by most office supply stores (Office Depot, Staples).
An original piece of a famous artist's work of art is expensive. A lithograph print is more affordable, but it still carries a tag of exclusivity, quality and value, as there will almost definitely not be many copies. It is not a reproduction and higher prices for the original lithograph are potentially required.
Many people use Canva's pre-made logo layouts and elements, so if you don't modify the design and elements heavily, your logo will not be exclusive to you. It is impossible to trademark non-exclusive logos. To create your logo, you're also welcome to use your own elements that you upload to Canva.
Re-create the PDF if you have the original source file from which the PDF was created. In the original program, open the file (like a word processor or a page layout program). Select File > Print, then select the option to save the file as a PDF. Open your new PDF file and try to print it again.
A printed name is simply the name written out so that people can read it (signatures might not be easy to read, so sometimes people will ask for both). A signature is often written in cursive, it's the individual's own way of writing their name for things like contracts, checks, etc.
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