"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
We have graded charts for all brands and colors. No surprizes
OP, where are you located? California is good for post exposure in the sun but our humidity or lack thereofcan cause dry in problems at worst and constantly having to hydrate ink at best. Guess how many brandsof spray bottles we've been through? Some days we try and schedule all WB for early in the day. Them Southerners probably have it best in terms of that issue.
PVC and the associated phthalates and plasticizers are the only thing I honestly have against plastisol. Printed correctly, with quality inks and optimal curing, you'll deliver a very fine product in 80% of situations with plastisol. It was engineered to print well and it really does, you just need to know what to do with it. It's incredibly versatile- our plastisol system can print on nearly any fabric with not too many bases to keep in stock. It has real advantages in many ways.
Obviously any print method, equipment, chemistry, etc, must fit each individual business model. Please don't think I am poo-pooing anyone who does not embrace waterbase technology. We simply seized on it years ago (even when it was much harder) and found ways to overcome each obstical. I cannot expand much on how; but we did. We did it for reasons I have mentioned endlessly. We are approximately 85% WB and growing. If nothing else it is the number one factor in increased sales and opportunities. Again, not for everyone.
I know of a handful of shops who at least advertise themselves as 100% waterbased, usually paired with a bunch of "look how green we are verbage", which always stuck me as odd with the amount of electricity, gas, chemicals, and water used it the process that definitely make our business far from green, not to mention the formaldehyde in almost every kind of discharge isnt exactly green.