L&NW Staff08.05.20
Bobst's Federico D’Annunzio has been chosen as the recipient of the R. Stanton Avery Global Achievement Award 2020. This is one of five Label Industry Global Awards categories, which saw judging take place in July.
These annual awards are now in their 17th edition.
Sponsored by Avery Dennison, the R. Stanton Avery Global Achievement Award recognizes an innovation or idea that has helped transform and progress the label industry across the world. Bestowed in memory of Stan Avery’s pioneering spirit and values, the award reflects the global nature of the industry and recognizes the collective contributions of the many, as well as individuals.
D'Annunzio has been a passionate advocate of the digitization of the conventional label printing process. He joined the label industry at a time when two to three hours were required to change jobs and the operator was the master of quality. D’Annunzio as developed a host of process enhancements, and a complete job changeover now takes around one minute. Quality control is fully digitalized with a closed-loop system monitoring pressure, register and color, all independent of the operator’s skill set.
An active member of FINAT for several years, he helped focus the association on new ideas and attracting new members. He led the establishment of REVO, a team of leading industry players cooperating to promote and optimize extended color gamut printing in the flexo label industry, allowing spot colors to be printed using a fixed 7-color ink system without changing inks between jobs.
D'Annunzio was also instrumental in establishing the UVFoodSafe group, where key industry players worked together to promote the best practice in the use of UV inks in indirect food contact labels and flexible packaging applications.
After the acquisition of Gidue, D'Annunzio took on a senior technology innovation role at Bobst.
Previous winners of the R. Stanton Avery Global Achievement Award include Jim DeFife of Multi-Color Corporation, Alex Knott, of Dow Chemical Company, Professor Tan of PEIAC, Tomas Rink of Ritrama, Helmut Schreiner of Schreiner Group, Suzanne Zaccone of GSI Technologies, and Neil McDonough of FLEXcon.
This year’s international judging panel has also drawn up the shortlist for the other four awards, which are as follows (listed in alphabetical order):
The Award for Innovation (for companies with more than 300 employees):
“What really stood out for us was the wide range of Federico's creative and innovative solutions that between them have had such an impact on the fast-changing world of label press design, productivity and performance," he adds. "We look forward to honoring him and all our winners in September.”
Also on the judging panel for this year’s awards were: James Quirk, group managing editor, Labels & Labeling; Chris Ellison, president, FINAT; Craig Moreland, past chairman, TLMI; Greg Hrinya, editor, Label & Narrow Web; and Jean Poncet, editor-in-chief, MP MEDIAS.
All winners will be celebrated in a special online announcement in September.
These annual awards are now in their 17th edition.
Sponsored by Avery Dennison, the R. Stanton Avery Global Achievement Award recognizes an innovation or idea that has helped transform and progress the label industry across the world. Bestowed in memory of Stan Avery’s pioneering spirit and values, the award reflects the global nature of the industry and recognizes the collective contributions of the many, as well as individuals.
D'Annunzio has been a passionate advocate of the digitization of the conventional label printing process. He joined the label industry at a time when two to three hours were required to change jobs and the operator was the master of quality. D’Annunzio as developed a host of process enhancements, and a complete job changeover now takes around one minute. Quality control is fully digitalized with a closed-loop system monitoring pressure, register and color, all independent of the operator’s skill set.
An active member of FINAT for several years, he helped focus the association on new ideas and attracting new members. He led the establishment of REVO, a team of leading industry players cooperating to promote and optimize extended color gamut printing in the flexo label industry, allowing spot colors to be printed using a fixed 7-color ink system without changing inks between jobs.
D'Annunzio was also instrumental in establishing the UVFoodSafe group, where key industry players worked together to promote the best practice in the use of UV inks in indirect food contact labels and flexible packaging applications.
After the acquisition of Gidue, D'Annunzio took on a senior technology innovation role at Bobst.
Previous winners of the R. Stanton Avery Global Achievement Award include Jim DeFife of Multi-Color Corporation, Alex Knott, of Dow Chemical Company, Professor Tan of PEIAC, Tomas Rink of Ritrama, Helmut Schreiner of Schreiner Group, Suzanne Zaccone of GSI Technologies, and Neil McDonough of FLEXcon.
This year’s international judging panel has also drawn up the shortlist for the other four awards, which are as follows (listed in alphabetical order):
The Award for Innovation (for companies with more than 300 employees):
- Avery Dennison
- HP Indigo
- Lenze SE
- Paper Machine Converting Company (PCMC)
- GEW (EC) Limited
- GMG Color
- Tecnocut
- Andrew Boyd
- Elizabeth Yerecic
- Jesse Freitas
- Lindsey Muchka
- Vineeth Bhandari
- Avery Dennison
- Avery Dennison Brazil
- Phoseon Technology
“What really stood out for us was the wide range of Federico's creative and innovative solutions that between them have had such an impact on the fast-changing world of label press design, productivity and performance," he adds. "We look forward to honoring him and all our winners in September.”
Also on the judging panel for this year’s awards were: James Quirk, group managing editor, Labels & Labeling; Chris Ellison, president, FINAT; Craig Moreland, past chairman, TLMI; Greg Hrinya, editor, Label & Narrow Web; and Jean Poncet, editor-in-chief, MP MEDIAS.
All winners will be celebrated in a special online announcement in September.