"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
For most of the year we turn down all single piece orders, but during the holidays we're asked for them daily and try to keep local customers happy. It always reminds me of why we don't do them the rest of the year. 75% are easy, it's the other 25% that make the holidays not so bright. How do the rest of you , that do them, handle the orders? Side note: we either cut heat apply or print digital heat apply.
they're basically a loss if you have to spend any time with this person on phone or email, which invariably you will have to. our DTG is basically for runs that require sim process but low quantity and a sample making machine
Step one was determining what price makes these jobs worth my time. I then make the shirt, and say thank you.Step one may make this job less appropriate for some folk's business model than others.
Dye sub on Jerzees 21M. Feels close enough to cotton and they sublimate really well. Pretty much limited to white or light color shirts, but most people that want 1 to 9 shirts seem to want a photograph or something of that nature so I tell them it's white shirts or nothing. The margins are good. I'd like to get into DTG one day to offer any color shirt. I see a lot of abandoned shopping carts on my inksoft store because it doesn't allow people to checkout with orders under 12 pieces. Makes me wonder if DTG and no minimums is the way to go.
Quote from: Nation03 on January 08, 2017, 01:54:36 PMDye sub on Jerzees 21M. Feels close enough to cotton and they sublimate really well. Pretty much limited to white or light color shirts, but most people that want 1 to 9 shirts seem to want a photograph or something of that nature so I tell them it's white shirts or nothing. The margins are good. I'd like to get into DTG one day to offer any color shirt. I see a lot of abandoned shopping carts on my inksoft store because it doesn't allow people to checkout with orders under 12 pieces. Makes me wonder if DTG and no minimums is the way to go.If one limits themselves to white shirts, the results from today's ink jet transfers can be quite surprisingly astounding! I get nothing but raves. It's not exactly automatic turn key as one needs to learn the color accuracy characteristics of their inks and printers, but I bet that that is the same with any of these other inkjet technologies as well.
Quote from: Frog on January 08, 2017, 02:20:09 PMQuote from: Nation03 on January 08, 2017, 01:54:36 PMDye sub on Jerzees 21M. Feels close enough to cotton and they sublimate really well. Pretty much limited to white or light color shirts, but most people that want 1 to 9 shirts seem to want a photograph or something of that nature so I tell them it's white shirts or nothing. The margins are good. I'd like to get into DTG one day to offer any color shirt. I see a lot of abandoned shopping carts on my inksoft store because it doesn't allow people to checkout with orders under 12 pieces. Makes me wonder if DTG and no minimums is the way to go.If one limits themselves to white shirts, the results from today's ink jet transfers can be quite surprisingly astounding! I get nothing but raves. It's not exactly automatic turn key as one needs to learn the color accuracy characteristics of their inks and printers, but I bet that that is the same with any of these other inkjet technologies as well.Which printer are you running? I've been curious about the Roland BN-20. Looks like a cheaper, easier way to get into doing small runs on any color shirt. From what I hear it's much less maintenance when compared to DTG.