ting tools to cut or perforate roll and sheet media up to 5mm thick, with an optional extension via an oscillating tool to handle suitable media up to 10mm. Rotary and direct cutting tools are complemented by a creasing wheel as standard, while other options include a kiss-cut tool and Vivid’s VeloTaper, which applies double-sided adhesive tape for simple closure or assembly of finished items without requiring spot gluing. Also, standard is a pen tool that can be used to code or even ‘sign’ printed items with simulated fonts or handwriting. Media that can be handled include card, paper, stickers and label stock, KT board, foam or ABS boards, corrugated, and various reflective materials. Maximum cutting speed is 1000mm/sec and repeated accuracy is given as ±0.1mm via a CCD registration system. There is also a camera that can read barcodes or QR codes and automatically load job parameters via the supplied control software. This technology comes from Vivid’s established VeloBlade line but Evans is keen to point out that the Razar isn’t a cutter with a spot UV printer, but “a spot UV machine that can cut and crease”, and this is where its capabilities become quite distinct from any other finishing equipment. Spot the Difference The digital spot UV print capability is provided by Xaar printheads and ink, offering up to 1440dpi resolution – more than enough to pick out fine details in type or line art – but only across a B2 area. This could be ‘windowed’ onto a B1 sheet but Vivid sees it as more likely that users will operate at B2 since that’s the effective limit for the vast majority of the digital presses with which the Razar is likely to be coupled. While thinking about supported formats, it’s also worth noting that while the minimum sheet size is A4 (297 x 210mm), with the correct feeds, narrow web label material can also be handled; the combination of spot UV and kiss-cutting of self-adhesive label stock is one of many new applications that Vivid is exploring. Via suitable jigs, small items like pens, coasters, smartphone cases, or even pieces of slate can also be spot coated, subject only to the 10mm material height limitation. The UV finish for the moment is gloss, but Vivid is working on a matte version that Evans says will be available in early 2026. A single-pass coating can build depth up to 100 microns, and a second pass can double that, bringing Braille or deeply textured options within reach. Within each pass, the thickness can be varied between one and 100% and that can vary across the sheet, opening up considerable creative capabilities to affect both look and feel of the finished item. There are tools in Vivid’s supplied software to enable the spot UV to be applied to different parts of a job based on its content, and the system is also compatible with Fiery controllers, so it’s not necessary for clients to provide specialised artwork in order to benefit from the spot UV capability. It is possible for them to do so if they wish, however, by adding an appropriately configured spot UV layer into their PDFs. The spot UV can be applied to pretty much any substrate, including uncoated papers, without requiring any lamination or other coating, making possible some eye-catching combinations and effects. Evans points out that if you want to add foiling too, you can pass jobs through the existing Matrix line of foil-over-toner laminators and stresses the decade-plus of experience that Vivid has in this type of embellishment. Vivid has already taken orders for several Razar units, though at the time of writing they haven't been installed. Evans says that customers are planning to use it in direct mail, on envelopes, in web-to-print/ecommerce products such as wedding or event invitations, and in luxury packaging, but add that in terms of potential applications, “we’re only just getting going”. As with many products that offer a novel set of new capabilities, it’s not hard to imagine that many new and unanticipated applications will be found, but even for the purposes mentioned here it’s not hard to see the appeal of the space, staff, and cost saving (the Razar starts from around £60,000) that such an all-in-one device can offer for short and mid-runs for “anyone with a digital press”, as Evans put it. Maximum Sheet Size: Cut/crease only: B1; spot UV: B2 Spot UV Resolution: Up to 1440dpi UV Thickness: Up to 200µ (two-pass), continuously variable and within the job Cutting Speed: Up to 1000mm/sec Cutting/Plotting Tools: Standard: rotary, direct, and pen; optional: oscillating, kiss-cut, and VeloTaper Statistics ▼ The Razar is described as a spot UV machine that can both cut and crease ▲Lewis Evans introducing the Razar at The Print Show 2025 27 www.printmonthly.co.uk Issue 358 - January | February 2026 UNDER THE HOOD | VIVID RAZAR
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