| Legal Exhibits & Photo Enlargements Give Print Shop
A Niche |
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Legal Exhibits --those large blowups of vehicle
accidents and crime scenes that juries are shown during a
trial --are much in demand and a growing market for Benchmark
Printing has owner Steve Skelton smiling like a lawyer who
has just won a big case.
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Skelton entered that market about three years ago
and has added equipment that now makes it possible for him
to take a small photograph, enlarge it to 36 inches long,
retain the original colors, mount it to foam board and, if
desired by the customer, add various textures or gloss.
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His customers include police, prosecutors, lawyers
and paralegals. But what started as an effort to get into
the legal exhibits niche has expanded into the "civilian"
community. Customers bring in photos of their kids and pets,
and they bring in images of the distant past, all to be enlarged
as much as three feet in width.
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Benchmark Printing started in July 1995 when Skelton
bought out SEMO Printing. The new business was squeezed into
1,800 square feet but almost doubled its footage with an ambitious
expansion last year.
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Commercial printing services include a collator
that Skelton says "is kind of unique to this area."It
has the capability to assemble newsletters, booklets and other
informational packets, and it can collate up to 30 sheets
at a time.
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The business has three printing presses --for one-color,
two-color and envelopes job orders. Business cards, letterhead
and desktop publishing are offered.
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Benchmark also reproduces blueprints by making black
and white engineering copies.
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