Your Weekly Large Format Print Briefing — Week 3, 2026
Your weekly 5-minute intelligence briefing for large format print professionals
Week 3 closed with a clear signal: wide format progress continued to favor capacity expansion and workflow refinement over breakthrough innovation. Mimaki widened its sublimation footprint for textile applications, Mutoh accelerated eco-solvent production speeds, and Fiery unified RIP workflows across variable data printing—each addressing specific bottlenecks rather than reinventing processes. Quality assurance also surfaced as a competitive differentiator, with manufacturing certification moving from pharmaceutical standards into ink production supply chains.
📢 This Week in Wide Format Brief
Mimaki launched TS330-1800 sublimation printer with 1.9m width and 11-color ink support
Fiery released XF 9 RIP software integrating variable data and cloud color control
Mutoh introduced XpertJet 1641SR Pro II with 60% faster speeds and automation enhancements
NUtec Digital Ink received GMP manufacturing certification from SGS
Roland DGA confirmed Impressions Expo presence with updated TY-300 DTF printer
📰 Top 5 Headlines This Week
Mimaki Expands Sublimation Capacity with TS330-1800 and 11-Color Ink Support
Summary:
Mimaki expanded its TS330 sublimation series with the 1,940mm-wide TS330-1800 model (73 m²/hour) and extended the entire line to support 11 Sb411 inks including fluorescent colors. Sales commenced January 2026 for home décor, interior textiles, and large-panel signage applications.
Industry takeaways:
Width expansion from 1.6m to 1.9m directly addressed home décor applications where single-panel curtains and drapes reduce finishing labor and material waste compared to seamed assemblies
Fluorescent ink additions targeted sportswear and branded signage markets where color saturation and visual impact determine purchase decisions more than subtle gradation quality
Oeko-Tex Eco-Passport certified ink formulation positioned the system for brands with documented sustainability requirements, converting compliance from a checkbox into a market access tool
Why It Matters:
Wider format printing reduced finishing touchpoints while improving gang-run layout efficiency. Extended ink compatibility made fluorescent capability a software-enabled ink swap rather than separate equipment purchase, simplifying the capability decision.
Fiery XF 9 Integrates Variable Data and Cloud Color Control for Unified Large-Format Workflows
Summary:
Fiery released XF 9 RIP software integrating FreeForm Create 2.0 variable data printing and ColorGuard cloud color control. The update unified VDP workflows across all Fiery-driven printers and added AI-powered print bleed generation for canvas applications. ColorGuard provided free through 2026.
Industry takeaways:
Unified VDP workflow eliminated the traditional pattern of buying separate personalization tools for different printer technologies, reducing training overhead and software license complexity
Cloud-based color verification addressed the growing customer requirement for documented color compliance rather than visual approval alone, particularly in brand consistency programs
AI-generated bleed automation tackled a specific prepress failure mode where canvas wrap jobs arrived without proper edge content, creating production delays or rejection at press check
Why It Matters:
Variable data scaled when setup friction dropped below personalization value. Unified design across printer types changed economics by eliminating device-specific training and tools, while cloud verification provided compliance audit trails without formal programs.
Mutoh Refreshes Eco-Solvent Line with XpertJet 1641SR Pro II Speed and Automation Gains
Summary:
Mutoh introduced the XpertJet 1641SR Pro II with AccuFine HD Pro head achieving 17.6 m²/hour (60% faster than Pro version). Updates included i-Screen EX control, Wide Color Choice gamut extension, and automation features: DropMaster 2, FeedMaster, Media Tracker, and Nozzle Area Select.
Industry takeaways:
60% speed increase directly impacted vehicle wrap shops where panel throughput determined daily capacity more than maximum resolution capabilities
Automation features concentrated on eliminating setup variability—bidirectional alignment, media feed calibration, and nozzle fault recovery addressed the operator-dependent adjustments that consumed production time
Wide Color Choice gamut extension targeted high-impact graphics where deeper blacks and brighter reds differentiated finished vehicles and retail signage from commodity print output
Why It Matters:
Automated calibration reduced operator-dependent variables more than speed gains alone. Nozzle Area Select enabled continued production during partial head failures, changing maintenance from immediate shutdown to scheduled downtime during natural production breaks.
NUtec Digital Ink Achieves GMP Manufacturing Certification from SGS
Summary:
NUtec Digital Ink received Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) certification from SGS, validating independently audited quality systems for UV-curable, water-based, and solvent ink production. Certification covered raw material management, process validation, traceability, and documentation standards.
Industry takeaways:
GMP certification brought pharmaceutical-grade quality assurance protocols into inkjet consumables manufacturing, establishing documentation standards uncommon in printing industry supply chains
Independent audit validation addressed OEM supply requirements where ink consistency affected warranty compliance and long-term printer performance
Traceability systems built into GMP processes enabled batch-level tracking from raw materials through finished products, supporting root-cause analysis when quality issues surfaced
Why It Matters:
GMP validation mattered when OEMs audited suppliers for manufacturing consistency rather than just testing finished products. Third-party certification reduced audit overhead while addressing the reality that ink consistency matters more than any other consumable attribute.
Roland DGA Confirms Impressions Expo Presence with Updated TY-300 DTF Printer
Summary:
Roland DGA announced Impressions Expo participation (January 22-24, booth #581) featuring the updated TY-300 DTF printer with doubled white ink capacity. The company scheduled a “DTF for Screen Printers” seminar targeting shops considering workflow additions.
Industry takeaways:
White ink capacity doubling addressed the primary consumable bottleneck in DTF production where underbase coverage determined both print quality and production continuity
Screen printer-focused seminar acknowledged DTF’s growing adoption as a complement rather than replacement for traditional screen printing, particularly for short-run and sampling workflows
Trade show timing positioned apparel decoration technology at the start of peak ordering season for promotional products and decorated apparel markets
Why It Matters:
Doubled white ink capacity addressed the friction where operators managed ink levels more than running production. Roland positioned DTF as additive technology—short runs and samples moved to DTF while established production remained on screen, reflecting practical shop reality.
🎯 This Week’s Strategic Takeaway
Week 3 reinforced a pattern: equipment manufacturers prioritized removing operational friction over adding features. Whether expanding printable width, accelerating RIP workflows, or doubling consumable capacity, improvements targeted specific bottlenecks that constrained throughput or increased setup complexity. Quality assurance moved from implied to documented, reflecting market pressure for verifiable consistency over claimed performance.
❌ This Week’s Noise
Trade show participation announcements offered event scheduling value but minimal operational insight. Booth numbers and seminar times helped plan attendance but didn’t replace equipment evaluation criteria or technical specification analysis. Marketing language around “exciting new technologies” rarely translated to measurable workflow improvements until shops could test actual production scenarios.
📅 What’s Coming Up
📅 Impressions Expo Long Beach 2026 — January 22-24, 2026 | Long Beach, CA
Major apparel decoration and DTF printing showcase featuring Roland DGA, with focused seminars on screen printing integration and product customization workflows.
🔗 https://longbeach.impressionsexpo.com
📅 ISA Sign Expo 2026 — April 8-10, 2026 | Orlando, FL
Leading North American trade show for signage, graphics, and visual communication with wide-format equipment demonstrations and industry education.
🔗 https://www.signexpo.org
🧠 Smarter Every Week
Before committing to any “faster” printer upgrade, calculate actual bottleneck location: measure setup time, RIP processing time, print time, and post-processing time across representative jobs. Speed gains mean nothing if setup or finishing still constrain daily capacity. Document current state first, then target the slowest stage.
Thanks for tuning into this week’s Wide Format Brief. Until next time—keep printing.







