Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Tweaking some artwork to make these prints come out how you like them
Quote from: screenprintguy on December 17, 2015, 10:52:31 AMTweaking some artwork to make these prints come out how you like themI still want to know why these machines can't be calibrated so what's on a calibrated monitor matches what's on the print.this is freaking DIGITAL printing... the variables (within a set of parameters) should be able to be controlled nearly 100%...(I'm sure they can be calibrated, just needs to be done and figured out... --- Rich if you're listening... having a 'target' and a colorimeter built into a machine so that you *CAN* automatically calibrate to a color space would be an AWESOME feature)
Brandt, this is awesome. Very educational for those of us waiting for the DTG market to settle out somewhat. Thanks for that!At the end of all the testing, It would be really cool to compare overall average ink costs, and compare that to the initial cost of each machine. That way, we can figure out how many shirts need to be printed before the costs are equal. It seems like the M&R costs less per print, but more upfront. Therefore we could figure up how may shirts the Brother would print before ink costs eat up any savings in the purchase of the machine....good stuff, brah!
Both seemed to miss the mark on the original in opposite directions.Kind of frustrating.
Quote from: jvanick on December 17, 2015, 11:02:24 AMQuote from: screenprintguy on December 17, 2015, 10:52:31 AMTweaking some artwork to make these prints come out how you like themI still want to know why these machines can't be calibrated so what's on a calibrated monitor matches what's on the print.this is freaking DIGITAL printing... the variables (within a set of parameters) should be able to be controlled nearly 100%...(I'm sure they can be calibrated, just needs to be done and figured out... --- Rich if you're listening... having a 'target' and a colorimeter built into a machine so that you *CAN* automatically calibrate to a color space would be an AWESOME feature)Who said they "can't be". As I said, I believe Marco mentioned it can be.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 17, 2015, 11:05:28 AMQuote from: jvanick on December 17, 2015, 11:02:24 AMQuote from: screenprintguy on December 17, 2015, 10:52:31 AMTweaking some artwork to make these prints come out how you like themI still want to know why these machines can't be calibrated so what's on a calibrated monitor matches what's on the print.this is freaking DIGITAL printing... the variables (within a set of parameters) should be able to be controlled nearly 100%...(I'm sure they can be calibrated, just needs to be done and figured out... --- Rich if you're listening... having a 'target' and a colorimeter built into a machine so that you *CAN* automatically calibrate to a color space would be an AWESOME feature)Who said they "can't be". As I said, I believe Marco mentioned it can be.I'm just curious why they don't do this at install... -- not being argumentative or dissing the results at ALL... this is pretty freaking amazing actually.I'd just love to see an automatic way so that you can auto calibrate based on the shirt/pretreat/etc...
totally agree...so it's just one of those 'you can get close' but you still need to know what to tweak in the art for the best results type deals...
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 17, 2015, 11:50:28 AM This looks incredible. Which machine is this from?