"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: printguy on October 19, 2012, 01:43:59 PMDan, seeing that you did the separations for the customer, wasn't it incumbent on them to proof your work before pulling the trigger on screens & printing? Nothing, well almost nothing, is more frustrating than having a customer sign off on a proof only to find an error after the fact...This is true, but I made the mistake, so we "technically", were both at fault, but the problem started with me. I knew that. The real problem arises when (if I ever) make another major mistake like that and it's for a very large number of shirts, like 10,000, and I make a mistake like that. Sheesh, it would shut me down to have to cover that. My customer was very understanding about the whole thing. We work well together and he's even sent me two jobs just last night. It's a good thing to make sure he's not financially injured for my mistake. I would have been lucky had he needed to cover the entire cost and he would have allowed me to work it off.
Dan, seeing that you did the separations for the customer, wasn't it incumbent on them to proof your work before pulling the trigger on screens & printing? Nothing, well almost nothing, is more frustrating than having a customer sign off on a proof only to find an error after the fact...
I have a customer outside of my state which i do quite a bit for, but usually 100 items at a time. I recently printed some shirts with a heart print and he sends me an email like a week after he receives them and says the print is too close to the shoulder (too far left). I ask how many of the 60 items are like that he says ALL of them, im like WOW i can't imagine screwing all of them up, but anyway i told him I would reprint the order and send it to him. My question is do I ask for them to ship the bad ones back which I would pay the freight , or just let him have them. I feel I am creating a problem if I let him have them, they may get to thinking we can get two for one down the road. Just asking.