Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Dan, were you hired on as an artist, or as a shop manager?As an artist I would do as the shop manager asks.As the shop manager I would do things as I feel would run the best with the production team available.As an artist I would assume they hired me as an artist and separator.As a shop manager I would assume they hired me to run things in the most efficient way possible. But nobody likes the new guy comeing in and shaking things up, everybody knows it's going to happen, and then the eyes start rolling.Best of luck!Murphy
Dan, what do you mean you cannot use a top white? If it has anything to do with price it looks as though the previous decision makers do not understand the concept that even if the customer isn't paying for a top white that on a 10k pcs order the job would probably run better/look better then without. I might have mis understood that part of your post but for any production shop whatever method can provide the easiest time on press with minimal downtime should be the route to go. In my shop we print sometimes we print with 3-4 flashes(lucky our oval provides this flexibility) just because we can get the job done in much less time with much less headache. If we are printing thousands of shirts or more then we will do what it takes to engineer the print so it's as easiest to print regardless of what the screen count sheet wants. If someone told me the client isn't willing to pay 15 bucks for an extra screen and a few cents more a shirt but that meant making life hell on press for thousands of shirts I'd eat the cost myself to save the headaches. My opinion engineer the print to run the best/look the best and take advantage of flashes.
engineer the print to run the best/look the best and take advantage of flashes.
Danny and dirk, I'm with ya. For sure. In a nut shell, let's just say there is a very good reason why they needed to hire somone and that someone happens to be me. Part art, part sales, part production issues.Give me some time, I'm working on it. Just finished out my first week.
Quote from: Dottonedan on August 26, 2016, 09:21:13 PMDanny and dirk, I'm with ya. For sure. In a nut shell, let's just say there is a very good reason why they needed to hire somone and that someone happens to be me. Part art, part sales, part production issues.Give me some time, I'm working on it. Just finished out my first week. As an aside, what is the current situation there between sales and production? How much animosity is there? Since your job will straddle both it could be a real tough one to walk into. Just your description of what you will be doing set off alarm bells for me.....
Quote from: DannyGruninger on August 26, 2016, 08:19:25 PMDan, what do you mean you cannot use a top white? If it has anything to do with price it looks as though the previous decision makers do not understand the concept that even if the customer isn't paying for a top white that on a 10k pcs order the job would probably run better/look better then without. I might have mis understood that part of your post but for any production shop whatever method can provide the easiest time on press with minimal downtime should be the route to go. In my shop we print sometimes we print with 3-4 flashes(lucky our oval provides this flexibility) just because we can get the job done in much less time with much less headache. If we are printing thousands of shirts or more then we will do what it takes to engineer the print so it's as easiest to print regardless of what the screen count sheet wants. If someone told me the client isn't willing to pay 15 bucks for an extra screen and a few cents more a shirt but that meant making life hell on press for thousands of shirts I'd eat the cost myself to save the headaches. My opinion engineer the print to run the best/look the best and take advantage of flashes.I agree with this, we use the same philosophy in our shop.