"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I know years ago when the owners here wanted to do some research in doing all-overs I was amazed at how much more was involved than current sized prints. I'll gladly let others take care of those orders. Good luck even though you don't need it.
Quote from: alan802 on August 05, 2014, 06:42:34 PMI know years ago when the owners here wanted to do some research in doing all-overs I was amazed at how much more was involved than current sized prints. I'll gladly let others take care of those orders. Good luck even though you don't need it. Thanks Alan and you're right. There are so many nuances to the process that pretty much no one thinks of until they creep up like a bad cold. The frames have to be a very specific size and they are custom made to spec, including the wall thickness. I know more than a few operations that (late in the game) realized they did not have the proper pre-press equip to process these screens. And so the very expensive pallets lie dormant; still in the crate. High tension usually will fail and simply isn't necessary as we are printing over the shoulder seams. Large scoop coaters and squeegees of course. Then theres the pallets. They must be taped in a very specific way and the same applies to tack. Loading and unloading? Well theres a two person method but we figured out how to do it with one and that's important.The process requires some converse thinking such as what I mentioned about tension. But theres more. The application is narrow and focused and; more importantly, dictated by production and not art/sales. Number of colors, detail, shirt styles and sizes must be pre-approved by production before any project gets too far in development. This goes against the way most of us operate ie: sales/art gets the job and production needs to figure it out (often at "whatever it costs") The template pictures precisely where we can and cannot decorate. Simply saying 28"x22" will get you into trouble real fast. Of course off the shoulder and tall side seams as well as shoulder to shoulder graphics are just a few techniques that are possible.Much more but this has a been a longer post than I'm usually allowed.Tony we will make custom frames to your parameters. Let me know if you need any.
Thanks mainly to Lenny and Eric. Sadly many try this and give up often due to poor planning. Primarily for shoulder to shoulder work for clothing lines so we dictate the art not the customer. They never get it right or understand image limits. Overall limits are 28" wide by 22" tall. I always do this for the art department