Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Eventually...you will also start seeing the actual knit as parallel and/or perpendicular to the board.
Step one that I do is to square up the design to the platen, I use a T square and measure off the sides to make sure it is centered or where I need it to be. Then I put a shirt on the platen, pull it all the way down and make sure sides are even. Then run a test print and make sure it's all correct, now I adjust my lasers to line up on seams or buttons or whatever so i can repeat everything the same on each shirt. Then print away. If its your first run don't be discouraged practice makes perfect. Remember the actual printing is like 20% of the job the prepress and setup is where it counts. Take your time to get it all correct before you start the run and everything else should fall into place. RT Screen Designs www.rtscreendesigns.com
Whether loading on just a heatpress or a one color press lasers help significantly.. You make it sound like printing on a V1000 is not worth production efficiency. I guess a pre registration system is also out of the question. In this industry,ignorance is not bliss.Don't start by selling yourself short.. That press has made others significant incomes.
Quote from: starchild on April 14, 2013, 01:11:54 PMWhether loading on just a heatpress or a one color press lasers help significantly.. You make it sound like printing on a V1000 is not worth production efficiency. I guess a pre registration system is also out of the question. In this industry,ignorance is not bliss.Don't start by selling yourself short.. That press has made others significant incomes.okies now after reading a fair bit, lasers can definitely help. its just that i always thought that lasers are mostly found on auto machines. but it seems like there are standalones that come seperate. thanks for the heads up!