"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I would recommend you find a really good contract printer in your area. That would allow you to sell print jobs of all sizes and quality levels while learning the business with no fixed expenses. Once you know all the ins and outs of the trade and still have the desire to get your hands dirty you can set up shop and still have a go to source for the larger/more difficult jobs.
think about this.......starting a business is like walking into a casino it is a gamble.If you are smart never go into a casino or start out investing more in a business with more $$$$$$ than you can afford to lose.evaluate the risk and don't fool yourself on the returnexpect to work hard, study the market and the process, adapt a product and work against the wind just to stay in the game.Visit the shop you mentioned but remember like a gambler we all tend to talk about the wins and forget about the expense committed to get those wins.You can make good $ printing shirts.you can have a real good setup with decent to very nice manual equipment all around for about 10K,you can jump in the business , equipment wise, for about 5K but if your business works at all you will be looking at the 10K or better upgrade in no time so if you can start out with better equipment, press dryer, screens, as a minimum.nice manual presses are about $1,000.00 per station newnice dryers capable of handling the output from a decent manual are about $3,000.00 newopening bids on about a dozen or a few more screens say roller frames with mesh about $700 - $1000.00flash dryer @ $800 - 1000 newstartup chemicals $700.00operating equipment like squeegees, pressure washers , wash out facility @ $1500.00 +startup inks another $700- 1000.00 dependingother stuff you don't know you need but will end up buying $1200.00 to $3000.00 , examples art programs, printers , films, drying boxes for screens, storage racks/ cabinets for exposed screens, clip art, so the bottom line for nice equipment buying new with a 4 station / 4 color press you could be looking at $12,000 on the short side. If this is way above your budget you are fighting a big fire with a garden hoseOn one hand this is a lot of money......on the other hand it is pocket change in terms of starting a business that could return you 3 times the investment in the first year with the expectation of reasonable success.THIS IS YOUR BIG PROBLEM...........One of your drawbacks is you are going to be SEASONAL....if your fire fighting duties require your attention at the same time the tee shirt market heats up find another business. The tee shirt market is seasonal by most accounts especially for the little guys printing 12 to 24 shirt jobs. like fighting a fire you can't do it from a great distance, you have to be in the heat , so if the seasons happen fall at the same time you should rethink the idea. Your tee shirt shop connection I am guessing is in your area so will be a good indicator of when there is a market for you to sell into. Also it will take you about one solid year to really get going with customers , ability, recovery from mistakes and mis-starts etc. If you chop this up into 4-6 month segments broken up by your fire fighting duties you may never recover your investment. Screen printing takes a lot of time and effortbest of luck.... buy the best equipment you can starting out....work like hell to learn and develop your productmooseman
Damn a lot of helpful information. I honestly didn't think this site would help but I'm extremely glad I came across it. All this is info is really helpful, and I think the best thing for me to do is get some hands on in a shop and learn the business before I take my next step. You guy are all right and my first thought was "easy money" but Im going to have to work my butt off and its best to learn from other people before I just jump into it and start counting down the numbers in my bank account haha ! again thank you all for all the info and keep it coming