0 present participle of emboss
1 to decorate an object, especially with letters, using special tools that make a raised mark on its surface:
I suggest that the embossing machine is inefficient and that perforation is better.
Again, many tinned foods are imported and, therefore, any control of embossing would again be extremely difficult.
Each article of pottery has to be marked indelibly by stamping, printing, embossing or impressing.
It is not necessarily to do with the milk bottle or other identification; names, embossing or badges.
I assume that this is an appliance for embossing the official mark on the ballot paper.
This, then, is the situation about embossing so far as firms carry it out at the moment.
My concern is to make it easier for them to distinguish tinned foodstuffs by a recognisable form of embossing on tins.
There is also the problem of cost of new machinery for embossing.