"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
What is used on all of those car stickers I see, like the stick figure families. Are they always stuck on the outside?Are there different tacks?Are they small enough that they generally apply easily enough that the average Joe (or Josephine) gets them with no bubbles or wrinkles?
Stan, you're jumping me way up on the compilation scale. I'm just curious about them little window stickers, LOL! Baby steps.Besides, you know how it starts, make this and that for the wife, and friends, and then someone asks, hey, where did you get that?I assume that most of the stickers I see were applied by the end users, so that part can't be too tough. So, when I see them lifting and curling up, they are probably the cheaper calendered type, eh?Also, how does one remove them when they want to?
and I just noticed I typed "compilation" rather than "complication". Dang that spell check correct!
Quote from: Frog on August 18, 2015, 05:30:29 PMand I just noticed I typed "compilation" rather than "complication". Dang that spell check correct!Just turn yourself in to the grammar police. You'll find you are in good company.I forgot to mention, when the decals "lift" or "curl" at the edges, and/or the vinyl shows cracks, then yeah. It's probably calendered vinyl.Other than the money you save with calendered vinyl, it has another odd but good characteristic. After you cut the vinyl, if it is very detailed, you can leave it sit a day or two before weeding, or stick it in a freezer for a while and its tendency to shrink slightly becomes your friend. Its that shrinkage that makes weeding teensy weensy details much easier. Fine details can make you go crazy, especially with eyes like mine. (old)
I'm beginning to think you didn't mean a bumper sticker material for screen printing, didn't think about cutting and weeding at all, hence the recommendation for Gill Line. If you went that way, the removable adhesives let you peel off without the tearing...Steve