วันอาทิตย์ที่ 5 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Heat Press Ink Jet Transfers

I have discussed print on interrogate (Pod) t-shirt publishing in previous articles and discussed how you can use online systems such as Cafe Press to start your own firm with dinky out of pocket charge and a few good ideas. I still very suggest using these systems due to their relative ease of use and low start-up cost, but there are other options available.

I discussed Direct To Garment (Dtg) printers in an additional one article, which is what Cafe Press uses to print their shirts, and talked about the high cost related with them. If you were to buy one of these machines it would set you back at least ,000 for a used machine. If anything finds one out there for less money and in decent shape please drop me an email as I would like to stay on top of any declining prices in the Dtg sub-section of this business. It's my belief that if these machines were more affordable they would be the best option for population curious in the t-shirt develop business. You have the ability to print out one shirt from your develop template and truly see how it is going to look printed on to the fabric. There is naturally no substitution for this. You can blow up your image on Cafe Press and get a good feel for what you will be getting, but when your develop is printed the color palette is Cmyk based, and on your computer screen the images are Rgb based. Rgb of policy stands for red, green, blue which most population are well-known with. The Cmyk color wheel is a dinky less known, but the one used in printing. It stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Key (Black). If you are uploading your Rgb image to Cafe Press they are going to convert it to Cmyk for the printing process and some colors can have a distinct appearance. This isn't a huge deal right now, otherwise Cafe Press would in fact address this issue if population were returning merchandise because it wasn't the same colors as what they belief they were getting. There is a disagreement in the two color wheels, however, and you should at least be aware of the difference.

Dye Sub Printer

Most of you probably know about Plastisol heat transfers which are a sheet of paper that ink is distributed on and then, using a heat press, are transferred to the garment. You can have companies make these for you from your designs if you want to do your custom shirts from your home or office, but the same question as with print on interrogate arises due to the fact that you can't in fact see all the colors you would if you printed it right on the shirt. So let us say you have a great develop with complicated colors that you are in fact sure will sell like gangbusters. You upload your develop to your firm of option and they print 500 heat transfers with your develop on them. A short time later you get the designs and excitedly press your first shirt, and it doesn't look like what you wanted. Possibly an area of the develop is too light or dark. Maybe the text is too small or the stroke of the text is too thin. The lowest line is you are now stuck with 500 transfers that you paid good money for and aren't happy with the design.

Along comes an additional one option that could bail you out of the above scenario and save you a boatload of time and money. Introducing the ink jet heat transfer. What? Yes you read that correctly, ink jet heat transfer. You can now buy blank Plastisol transfers and run them straight through your acceptable ink jet printer to print out your image. I can hear the gears in your head spinning, I know mine were when I first heard this. You are probably mental you'll just forget about the print on interrogate option and use that acceptable printer of yours to print out shirts, allowing you to sell them for less money than print on interrogate can. Well, that was where I started going as well, but keep in mind those companies like Cafe Press are printing, shipping, advertising, and accepting prestige cards for you, not to mention the fact that they are a corporate presence with a website attracting millions of customers. After contacting the firm who makes these transfers for more data I put together a list of other concerns and problems.

* The cost of acceptable ink has to be taken in to catalogue and it's not cheap.

* They didn't convince me that the ability was as good as their other transfers, and you don't want an inferior product out there with your name related with it.

* How long did your last printer hold out? Home printers aren't designed to print in large numbers or last very long. I have yet to find a printer that impresses me with longevity.

* You need to make sure your printer uses pigment based ink instead of acceptable dye ink. Dye ink, which is industry standard, absorbs in to the paper, whereas pigment based inks set on top of the paper in encapsulated bubbles basically. I dream it's because of this lack of absorption that the pigment is the best option.

So you may be wondering why I bring this formula up if I don't believe it's a viable option. Well I think it's a great option, but not for production your shirts for sale. If you have a heat press or want to get one reconsider using the ink jet transfers for testing your designs. dream being able to print out a reasonably good ability image of your develop and heat press it on to a shirt. The benefits to that would be huge!

* You could make sure the text was the right size.

* You could ensure that the colors come out the way you anticipate.

* You could show it to friends and family on a shirt instead of a computer screen and get opinions and critiques.

* You could wear your develop nearby in group and see peoples reaction to it, complete with your website name on the back.

The ink jet transfer papers may come to be a good option in years to come, but right now I think it makes a great option for testing your designs. It could save you some headache and possible product returns down the road. Any questions please feel free to caress me. Happy Designing!

See Also : printer ink toner wofcamera http://bestgmingpc.blogspot.com/

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