18 presentations on the technical track and 10 more on the creative track provide for an intense learning and networking agenda during the 2nd edition of the Printed Interior Decoration (PID) conference which takes place on 5-6 June 2018 at the Radisson Blu Scandinavia hotel in Düsseldorf. Participants will witness the latest printing technologies for home textiles, wallpapers, laminated floorings, wooden panels, carpets, building and mobile interiors.
“Large format printing and industrial inkjet in general have been increasingly stimulating the trend of developing printed products for interior decoration, as well as personalization of design items. The trend has expanded in the professional environment and found its way into shops, bars, hotels, offices and other commercial areas. It employs digital printing technology for creating series of unique designs on wood, glass, textiles and other materials,” says Peter Buttiens, CEO of ESMA (European Specialist Printing Manufacturers Association), conference organizer. “On one hand, it is driven by economical aspects resulting in imitation of expensive materials such as exotic wood types or wall decoration techniques such as frescos and murals. On the other hand, we witness a returning demand for the use of large scale pictures as wallpaper or ceiling covers, only now they can be produced in the finest quality, meeting visual expectations, light fastness requirements and the overall end user demands. In that context, we invite both technology suppliers, as well as printers, interior designers, shop fitters and architects to PID 2018.”
Printed Interior Decoration will discuss topics ranging from substrates, workflow and pre-press, through printing systems, inks and finishing, to regulations and case studies, not only from suppliers but all involved in the creative process, including designers and print service providers. Some of the papers submitted for the main conference track include:
- “Transforming spaces into areas for living” by Xavier Jouvet from Antalis
- “Fascinating designs with additive color mixing” by Dr Marc Hunger from Merck Group
- “Wallpaper, aluminium, HPL – standard wide-format printers for bespoke solutions” by Stefan Höfs from Roland DG
- “The usage of inkjet printing for interior decoration” by Dr Dieter Holzinger from Tiger Coatings
- “Managing color deviations in the decorating industry” by Jan Seguda from ColorGATE
- “How to solve the conflicts between human perception and numeric spectral values by multispectral technology” by Michael Nothelfer from Caddon
- “How digital develops creative and functional interior textiles” by Prof. Marc Van Parys from Unitex
- “Conceptual framework or surface imaging concept” by Prof. Hitoshi Ujiie from Jefferson University
- “Exploring redesign opportunities using layers in inkjet-printed textile” by Prof. Kislaya Choudhary from the National Institute of Fashion Technology
- “What is still to be done for a good workflow in the industrial reality of design for interior decoration” by Prof. Angelika Rösner from Hochschule Niederrhein
- “Collective design – collective thinking” by the textile designer Katharina Jebsen
- “Storytelling for interiors with large format printing. Experience the transformation of a restaurant” by Caroline Zöller from Forteam Kommunikation
- “From white paper to identity. Handcrafted” by Andreas Weidner from Knoblauch Design
- Debbie McKeegan from Texintel
- Carl Huijskens from Incatro Room Acoustics
- Jörg Stein from Comexpo