"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
The danger in doing short run sublimation is the amount of time it takes....There is a local print shop that keeps busy doing stuff like this but I doubt they generate much revenue....So important to be mindful that you are not using up time that could be better used elsewhere....I like that sometimes the local folks seem so busy dong this unproductive work that they do not get out selling and quoting......PS....I am not saying it is not worthwhile, I am just saying you have to be mindful.....
Quote from: royster13 on April 15, 2015, 09:53:12 AMThe danger in doing short run sublimation is the amount of time it takes....There is a local print shop that keeps busy doing stuff like this but I doubt they generate much revenue....So important to be mindful that you are not using up time that could be better used elsewhere....I like that sometimes the local folks seem so busy dong this unproductive work that they do not get out selling and quoting......PS....I am not saying it is not worthwhile, I am just saying you have to be mindful.....Man, this is SOOO right!If you are going into this, Royster's warning is on the mark. You have to watch your pricing and scheduling or it won't make you enough to get out of the soup line. We use dye sub better now, but in the beginning we didn't charge enough. It's a time suck...or can be
can you elaborate? is it just getting the color profiles in order?
Remember sublimation only works on polyester and light preferably white colors. We have rarely had anyone want white polyester shirts or hats. We primarily use it for mugs and mouse pads. We spend more on ink keeping the heads alive than we do printing items. Most people turn away when you tell them the price including artwork. I find it like promotional products, you need to buy the blanks by the truck load to get the price cheap enough to compete with the big guys.
If you can track your actual time, (or pretty close....) and adjust your pricing, you can make some money. But WOW, I've watched the gals up front spend 15 minutes on one mug, fiddling with art, and charge 10 or 12 bucks.Same exact thing with Cad Cut Vinyl. Watch the clock. Any kind of "one-offs" are expensive.