Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on August 27, 2012, 09:34:08 AMQuote from: Sbrem on August 27, 2012, 09:29:47 AMQuote from: mk162 on August 26, 2012, 10:42:31 PMit's not an amateur question, i was wondering the same thing.Me too, looks like the shirt to me. I have White underbase, flash, cool, blue, orange, flash, cool, highlight white as a 4 color, if I had the the dark blue, it would be printed 1st, in front of the underbase white... A very straight ahead job I think, done thousands like it over the years.SteveThe only white on the shirt is the Teeth and the Sharks eyes. Everything else you think is white was light blue. The flash on the pic blew it out. There are 2 blues.Attached is the pre-press artwork. Well then, white under, flash, cool, dk. blue, lt. blue, orange, flash, highlight white. Still pretty straight ahead. Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on August 27, 2012, 09:29:47 AMQuote from: mk162 on August 26, 2012, 10:42:31 PMit's not an amateur question, i was wondering the same thing.Me too, looks like the shirt to me. I have White underbase, flash, cool, blue, orange, flash, cool, highlight white as a 4 color, if I had the the dark blue, it would be printed 1st, in front of the underbase white... A very straight ahead job I think, done thousands like it over the years.SteveThe only white on the shirt is the Teeth and the Sharks eyes. Everything else you think is white was light blue. The flash on the pic blew it out. There are 2 blues.Attached is the pre-press artwork.
Quote from: mk162 on August 26, 2012, 10:42:31 PMit's not an amateur question, i was wondering the same thing.Me too, looks like the shirt to me. I have White underbase, flash, cool, blue, orange, flash, cool, highlight white as a 4 color, if I had the the dark blue, it would be printed 1st, in front of the underbase white... A very straight ahead job I think, done thousands like it over the years.Steve
it's not an amateur question, i was wondering the same thing.
This brings up a thought I had a long time ago. What if we had Dan the Sep man come up with a design. we as printers go ahead with our method of sep'n (in house, send out, whatever) print and trade each other our finished product along with all the details. I bet we could all learn a few new tricks...
Ya thats how I wanted to run it but Shelly wasn't comfy with wet on wet. I need to just force it to be that way. Haha.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on August 27, 2012, 12:03:37 PMYa thats how I wanted to run it but Shelly wasn't comfy with wet on wet. I need to just force it to be that way. Haha. W.o.w. takes a bit of a learning curve. Flashing after every colour makes it easy, but as you know it's a production killer on bigger runs. I think getting comfy with w.o.w. is the toughest part of going from manual to auto. I sure suggest having at least 2 flash cure stations for anyone buying an auto, It may not be needed if you do a lot of sim process and index colour/half tone printing, but for bread and butter multi color spot printing it's a great help.The one thing I noticed from almost all the answers was how just about everybody was flashing right after the orange. Some colours just react better to having 2-3 other screens step on them w.o.w. than others.ps: I thought you were printing a dark navy blue and the shark belly/brow and design background were all white. I'd change my answer in light of them being light blue.
Just punch her in the mouth and tell her how it is!You got a beard don't you Brandt?
usually just a goatee. people with goatees are one of 3 things...assholes, child molesters or major league baseball players