An Africa magazine cover with stereo relief embellishment
Leveraging insights from the APP industry magazine, AMAGIC Technologies, based in Dubai and an affiliate of K Laser Group, collaborated with the editorial team to introduce a stereo relief image on the magazine cover which intricately sculpts the terrain of the African continent, enhancing it with a metallic surface finish. The cover features a title adorned with our reference pattern KF011, a wood grain pattern which implies the natural origin of pulp and paper. It is printed on 100% recyclable Eco-Paperboard®, emphasizing sustainability.
The reengineering of the magazine cover has resonated successfully with designers and creative, resulting in the distribution quantity doubling in three days during the Paper Eurasia trade fair. In the Edana Innovation Forum, Munich, Germany.
"Many participants and visitors reached to touch and feel the Virtual Embossed Cover and they were asking to receive additional separate covers for their colleagues," said Bechara Michel Dib, Editor in Chief.
▲ Comparison between a normal printed magazine cover (left) and a stereo relief-embellished version (right)
Digital print on metallic paper: The Kiss reimagined with intriguing vision
This stunning print features metallic paper from K Laser, showcased at the HP Indigo Asia Pacific and Japan VIP event in Singapore.
"The Kiss," painted by Austrian Symbolist Gustav Klimt in the early 1900s, is reimagined by skillfully avoiding the printing of the silver and platinum areas in the original artwork, allowing the metallic substrate to shine through. This transformation gives the classic piece a chic, digitalized look. Time waits for no one, but technology inspires us with new formats of art.
Case summary:
End user: HP GEC Singapore
Product used: Metallic Eco-Paperboard®
Hardcover book
Catalog "The Origin"
The catalogue was created to reposition holography as more than just decorative—transforming it into a storytelling and branding tool. It aimed to inspire brands and designers by showing how advanced holographic origination can deliver immersive, emotionally resonant visual experiences.
Using the solar system as a universal theme, the project interpreted the distinct surfaces of celestial bodies—like the rocky terrain of Mars or the icy texture of Pluto—into custom holographic patterns. These tactile, light-responsive designs demonstrated how holography can embody narrative and material meaning, redefining it as a medium for innovation in visual communication.