"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Another thing. Stay away from smoothing screens, rollers, double squeegees, beveled squeegees, hard flooding, s-mesh, super high tension screens and high EOM emulsion. All these are band aids for something your not doing right. Learn your press with basic stuff. Get a feel for what your press needs when something is going wrong. You do this and you can print any ink with any combination of variables. After that you can use these items to even further your skills and even further your ability to use your press. They are good tools and will improve your prints. Just spend some time dialing in your press and lean how to control it.Good luck. It took me a long time before I could print a perfect white print on my press. Now I can do it every time.
My problem with the statement is Jon is telling guys to "stay away" from these what he calls "band aids"........ The above mentioned is neither of those in my book just sayin
One can simply site Winterland. Not arguing tools, toys, bells, whistles just making an observation.
One could argue that a great printer knows how to exploit what you have to work with in order to print first quality graphics. All the other stuff is icing. You should have seen what printers pulled off on old Precisions for instance. One can simply site Winterland. Not arguing tools, toys, bells, whistles just making an observation.
Quote from: Jon on October 16, 2014, 02:43:46 AMAnother thing. Stay away from smoothing screens, rollers, double squeegees, beveled squeegees, hard flooding, s-mesh, super high tension screens and high EOM emulsion. All these are band aids for something your not doing right. Learn your press with basic stuff. Get a feel for what your press needs when something is going wrong. You do this and you can print any ink with any combination of variables. After that you can use these items to even further your skills and even further your ability to use your press. They are good tools and will improve your prints. Just spend some time dialing in your press and lean how to control it.Good luck. It took me a long time before I could print a perfect white print on my press. Now I can do it every time.Quote from: DannyGruninger on October 16, 2014, 07:13:12 PMMy problem with the statement is Jon is telling guys to "stay away" from these what he calls "band aids"........ The above mentioned is neither of those in my book just sayinThe quote above is from an another thread. The guy in that thread was having a really hard time printing on an auto for the first time. I mean the print was so smashed into the shirt that all you saw was fibers. For this guy, in this situation he should stay away from "the advanced tools" and just work with what he has until he understands how his press works. Why complicate things for the guy when a simple white under-base is not possible. Now once he get better the "the advanced tools" can come in to get him from a 90% perfect to a 100% perfect print. This statement was not a blanket statement to stay away from these "advanced tools". Sorry for the confusion and I hope no one thinks I am against advancements in this industry. Hell I am more of a early adopter then an old school guy. By the way just got Photoshop 3...its got layers.....so much better then Photoshop 2. Check out the attached screen shot. Its so complicated its going to take a while to find everything.
Quote from: Jon on October 16, 2014, 02:43:46 AMAnother thing. Stay away from smoothing screens, rollers, double squeegees, beveled squeegees, hard flooding, s-mesh, super high tension screens and high EOM emulsion. All these are band aids for something your not doing right. Learn your press with basic stuff. Get a feel for what your press needs when something is going wrong. You do this and you can print any ink with any combination of variables. After that you can use these items to even further your skills and even further your ability to use your press. They are good tools and will improve your prints. Just spend some time dialing in your press and lean how to control it.Good luck. It took me a long time before I could print a perfect white print on my press. Now I can do it every time.I pity the worker who, from the get-go, with no previous grasp of the process, learns in a shop with all of the bells, whistles, band-aids and tools, who then hits the real world realization that in new surroundings, he has to make do with "average equipment".
Buddy i am so heart wrenchingly disappointed its bothering me a lot.
Quote from: vwyob on October 18, 2014, 11:06:02 AMBuddy i am so heart wrenchingly disappointed its bothering me a lot.Been there brother and you can't do that to yourself. We are in control of how we react to a situation and you're choosing to let it get to you. This is business so treat it as such. Keep the personal feelings on the matter in check and handle this guy with ferocity. Do not allow him to bend your frame, hold your ground and hand him walking papers.