Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Darryl, a lot of what we strive to learn here and why we get the best tools for the job are to print those crappy shirts as hassle free and fast as we can.We just did a Cub Scout job the other day... They brought in old shirt and it was a terrible one color "picture" of the wolf cub mascot. It was awful two tone thing using the shirt for the second color.I stopped my guy and said, lets half tone that guy out and make him look legit and pop off that shirt. Sent them the proof, they loved it. Printed with essentially zero hassle thanks to the proper tools and knowledge learned almost exclusively here. Client loved it.Now, maybe that customer may shop it around next year, but the next guy is gonna have a lot harder shirt to reproduce and they better do a good job, because we did!
I'm always intrigued by the amount of info I see that runs counter to what I've seen in production, especially considering how much of it comes from people who are not 'newbs', or at least not presented as such. There is an amazing assortment of plausible ignorance about screens, whether it's stretching them, coating them, imaging them, or printing them, and it can be infuriating that some can do so many things wrong and do well, and others can do so much right but do poorly. There are many dead ends I started exploring because of very convincing talk, and found only opportunity loss--but who knows what else I, (or they,) are doing wrong, or not realizing there was a missing key component. Even 'wrong' is such a poor term in such a huge field with so many possibilities, knowing some people with hundreds or thousands of dollars worth of equipment can do similar or better jobs than some with tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands worth of equipment. Even relatively simple subjects like tension get thrown around without consideration to ALL the parameters, which would likely take much too long to factually discuss for most printers.After taking a break, (and realizing printing is way more fun than internetting ,) I realized the vast majority of sources give advice that is either poor or is not necessarily beneficial to the printer asking, the best ones only do so only on accident not realizing how different someone's shop may be, and only the very very best realize have the ability to recognize they may be wrong, in or out of context, and be willing to give some other technique a fair shake. An unusual status to achieve, or at least that would be the impression I get from what I read on these types of forums.I tend to stick with my 'trade library' now, as I did long ago, realizing that even 'ancient' books like J Clarkes CWC, and Saati's tech fundamentals have more useful info than most 'printers' will ever truly understand. I can't help but feel horribly for an increasing number of printers who seem to be ascertaining who is believable from who makes the most convincing arguments on-line. How do you go about deciding if the advice you read on the net and in the trade mags sounds reasonable? How often do you spend good R&D time just to end up shrugging and going back to "How you've always done it"?