Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 12, 2015, 10:52:24 AMQuote from: JBLUE on March 12, 2015, 10:12:24 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 12, 2015, 07:36:17 AMQuote from: JBLUE on March 11, 2015, 09:36:27 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 11, 2015, 09:50:21 AMQuote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.Dont bet on that. A lot of high end sampling still gets done on manuals. Running a small run through one is not all that uncommon. We have run sample runs that number in the hundreds and have been shipped all over the world to sales reps and potential vendors.Do you really believe Universal Studios would contact a manual printer and not provide him Seps and PMS colors for this shirt. In addition do you believe they would select a manual printer that could not determine color count of the job?There is the context of my original reply.Not only do I believe it but I have experience in it. We have printed for several movies during the production phase and yes some of them were printed on a manual. It is usually a PA or someone that works for the producer wanting shirts made for the cast and crew. Most of these people dont even know how the shirt process works anyhow so they are not going to be able to know if the printer knows what they are doing or not. Not everything goes through Universals merch department back here in Universal City. Most productions have a budget for swag and choose to push the money locally to help the local economies where they film. Not trying to be a dick but whats happening above does happen a lot more than you realize especially out here in movie land. We just embroidered hats for a movie being filmed in Louisiana. The referral was made by a Grip that got a hat from something else we did work on. The Producer saw it and wanted some for their set. I have done contract work for a printer that cant determine color counts for movies they have done work with. If you guys dont get any of that business your not going to realize that this is not all that uncommon.I agree there are exceptions to everything in life. I will lean to 9 times outta 10 that a when a printer is asking how many colors are in a copy written logo that is likely they don't have permission to print it to start with.agreed, 9 out of 10, but that makes the one person being blamed for something they did not do. Also, the poster seems to be from Canada and if he is in a remote part of the country, it is possible he is the only one around to get the order done.pierre
Quote from: JBLUE on March 12, 2015, 10:12:24 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 12, 2015, 07:36:17 AMQuote from: JBLUE on March 11, 2015, 09:36:27 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 11, 2015, 09:50:21 AMQuote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.Dont bet on that. A lot of high end sampling still gets done on manuals. Running a small run through one is not all that uncommon. We have run sample runs that number in the hundreds and have been shipped all over the world to sales reps and potential vendors.Do you really believe Universal Studios would contact a manual printer and not provide him Seps and PMS colors for this shirt. In addition do you believe they would select a manual printer that could not determine color count of the job?There is the context of my original reply.Not only do I believe it but I have experience in it. We have printed for several movies during the production phase and yes some of them were printed on a manual. It is usually a PA or someone that works for the producer wanting shirts made for the cast and crew. Most of these people dont even know how the shirt process works anyhow so they are not going to be able to know if the printer knows what they are doing or not. Not everything goes through Universals merch department back here in Universal City. Most productions have a budget for swag and choose to push the money locally to help the local economies where they film. Not trying to be a dick but whats happening above does happen a lot more than you realize especially out here in movie land. We just embroidered hats for a movie being filmed in Louisiana. The referral was made by a Grip that got a hat from something else we did work on. The Producer saw it and wanted some for their set. I have done contract work for a printer that cant determine color counts for movies they have done work with. If you guys dont get any of that business your not going to realize that this is not all that uncommon.I agree there are exceptions to everything in life. I will lean to 9 times outta 10 that a when a printer is asking how many colors are in a copy written logo that is likely they don't have permission to print it to start with.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 12, 2015, 07:36:17 AMQuote from: JBLUE on March 11, 2015, 09:36:27 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 11, 2015, 09:50:21 AMQuote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.Dont bet on that. A lot of high end sampling still gets done on manuals. Running a small run through one is not all that uncommon. We have run sample runs that number in the hundreds and have been shipped all over the world to sales reps and potential vendors.Do you really believe Universal Studios would contact a manual printer and not provide him Seps and PMS colors for this shirt. In addition do you believe they would select a manual printer that could not determine color count of the job?There is the context of my original reply.Not only do I believe it but I have experience in it. We have printed for several movies during the production phase and yes some of them were printed on a manual. It is usually a PA or someone that works for the producer wanting shirts made for the cast and crew. Most of these people dont even know how the shirt process works anyhow so they are not going to be able to know if the printer knows what they are doing or not. Not everything goes through Universals merch department back here in Universal City. Most productions have a budget for swag and choose to push the money locally to help the local economies where they film. Not trying to be a dick but whats happening above does happen a lot more than you realize especially out here in movie land. We just embroidered hats for a movie being filmed in Louisiana. The referral was made by a Grip that got a hat from something else we did work on. The Producer saw it and wanted some for their set. I have done contract work for a printer that cant determine color counts for movies they have done work with. If you guys dont get any of that business your not going to realize that this is not all that uncommon.
Quote from: JBLUE on March 11, 2015, 09:36:27 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 11, 2015, 09:50:21 AMQuote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.Dont bet on that. A lot of high end sampling still gets done on manuals. Running a small run through one is not all that uncommon. We have run sample runs that number in the hundreds and have been shipped all over the world to sales reps and potential vendors.Do you really believe Universal Studios would contact a manual printer and not provide him Seps and PMS colors for this shirt. In addition do you believe they would select a manual printer that could not determine color count of the job?There is the context of my original reply.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 11, 2015, 09:50:21 AMQuote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.Dont bet on that. A lot of high end sampling still gets done on manuals. Running a small run through one is not all that uncommon. We have run sample runs that number in the hundreds and have been shipped all over the world to sales reps and potential vendors.
Quote from: royster13 on March 11, 2015, 09:46:31 AMQuote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...Exactly, and I seriously doubt they are contacting manual printers to print this shirt.
Quote from: Mitchel on March 11, 2015, 09:31:33 AMHi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,Just make sure that the permission is actually from the legal department at Universal Studios...
Hi AllThank for your answer, I appreciateLooking for the permission for print that, yes we have the permission and I have to make sample before.I'll never print illegal picture for 200 or 500 t-shirt.ThankMichel,
...We just embroidered hats for a movie being filmed in Louisiana. ...
Quote from: JBLUE on March 12, 2015, 10:12:24 AM...We just embroidered hats for a movie being filmed in Louisiana. ...And this is part of the exact reason our tax breaks for the movie industry is hurting our state vs helping.We are WAY in the red for this program, but because it's bringing "notoriety" to the state because "oh, that was filmed here" or politicians can claim they are the reason so many movies were filmed here... we won't get rid of the program.Duck Dynasty guys all have their stuff printed/embroidered in China... kind of ironic given the nature of what they claim to stand for.