"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Is it possible its on poly t.Grey ink color makes me wonder or they did not do the right setting.Shane
Quote from: cbjamel on December 09, 2015, 12:10:18 AMIs it possible its on poly t.Grey ink color makes me wonder or they did not do the right setting.ShaneThese are 100% cotton tees. No poly at all.What they have produced is such a mess.
Hey Rockers,We have a Kornit machine. If I amreading you right, the grey one is the DTG? If so then for sure there is something wrong. It could be from a lot of sources ranging from file to shirt to pre-treat to ink settings. Hard to tell without being on site.What I can say for sure is that absolutely opaque whites are not hard to achieve.For comparison (you can show them the pics as evidence if you like) below is a job that we printed recently.
Quote from: TCred on December 09, 2015, 01:30:45 AMHey Rockers,We have a Kornit machine. If I amreading you right, the grey one is the DTG? If so then for sure there is something wrong. It could be from a lot of sources ranging from file to shirt to pre-treat to ink settings. Hard to tell without being on site.What I can say for sure is that absolutely opaque whites are not hard to achieve.For comparison (you can show them the pics as evidence if you like) below is a job that we printed recently.All I can say is it looks like you know how to operate your Kornit DTG, something I can`t say about most DTG shops over here. I think it`s because the distributer for most DTG machines here has no clue either how to set them up proper. Quick question, are there different setting you can choose from, like for full color prints or spot color only prints etc?