"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Our Mutoh / STS printer finally died, almost 2 years to the day and 3 print heads later. We have a new one coming in from Printomize. Do not buy a printer that takes cartridges, ever. No mater what. We absolutely have to have it in house. If all goes well, in the next few years we will 100% transition away from screen printing.
Quote from: Homer on March 01, 2024, 12:13:24 PMOur Mutoh / STS printer finally died, almost 2 years to the day and 3 print heads later. We have a new one coming in from Printomize. Do not buy a printer that takes cartridges, ever. No mater what. We absolutely have to have it in house. If all goes well, in the next few years we will 100% transition away from screen printing.This has my attention, in terms of transitioning away from screen printing all together. How will you handle large volume runs or are you shying away from that type of work all together?
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 01, 2024, 01:09:38 PMWhat I think some will over look is if that customer doesn't like DTF because the shop doing it doesn't do it right or understand art that is best suited for it or the customer isn't understanding what its best for...then not only lose that customer for future DTF but maybe entirely. Not that your shop is one of those, not saying that at all. I am seeing an uptick of people saying "how do you print shirts, I don't want DTF or DTG" type thing. In my opinion, same as screen printing. People will print stuff that is not ideal for the process. When I read here that you were going to press the DTF samples yourself, it made me a little sceptical. Because that is a huge part of the process, it’s as important to dial in as the print itself. can’t really dial in with two sheets. People say the same stuff to me about screen printing. Doesn’t it crack? There will always be crabby shops to win business from no matter what the process. Always some shops making a great process look bad.
What I think some will over look is if that customer doesn't like DTF because the shop doing it doesn't do it right or understand art that is best suited for it or the customer isn't understanding what its best for...then not only lose that customer for future DTF but maybe entirely. Not that your shop is one of those, not saying that at all. I am seeing an uptick of people saying "how do you print shirts, I don't want DTF or DTG" type thing.
Saw this DTF printer without powder. It prints the adhesive.https://get.printmosaica.com/cobraflex/I don't have any affiliation with them. Anything to reduce steps and eliminate complicated processes create great leaps in production. Make it simple and with less steps.I can see someone manufacturer a roll to roll single or dual heat transfer press with 2 indexing platens or more in the future for production. Just dtf print entire roll of film and load the roll onto a heat transfer press. Something like this picture but bigger.
Higher end dtf printers in the future will have many more robust printheads per color and be more industrial and expensive. Each iterations will be drastically improved. Current dtf machine are inexpensive and reduce labor costs, far less space requirements and a simple business model. The barrier to entry (low machine cost) is a problem for the industry and wholesalers selling dtf prints directly to end users will hurt traditional screen printing shops. I would think a lot of heat transfer presses are sold to side hustle start-ups.Just look what happened to the sign screen printing industry. It all went to inkjet except for industrial uses. There is a place for both inkjets and screen printing but things are changing.
Quote from: SPexchange on March 09, 2024, 05:25:33 PMHigher end dtf printers in the future will have many more robust printheads per color and be more industrial and expensive. Each iterations will be drastically improved. Current dtf machine are inexpensive and reduce labor costs, far less space requirements and a simple business model. The barrier to entry (low machine cost) is a problem for the industry and wholesalers selling dtf prints directly to end users will hurt traditional screen printing shops. I would think a lot of heat transfer presses are sold to side hustle start-ups.Just look what happened to the sign screen printing industry. It all went to inkjet except for industrial uses. There is a place for both inkjets and screen printing but things are changing. In our early days, 32 years ago, we printed tons of election signs. Then, it all dried up. We would print anything to be able to bill it, but eventually settled on just apparel decoration. I won't be in this game another 10 years so I'm not all that concerned about it. I just talked a customer into doing 425 left front with DTF, because of the tiny detail that just won't print as cleanly as an inkjet.Steve
The sheer amount of plastic waste makes my skin crawl.
So I just bought one.It makes sense for my business. I am always scrambling to find someone to be a press op, it is a constant battle. We only have a 6/8 diamondback, so color limit is 5. Our average shirt order is 12-150 pcs.So for me this will work. Maybe 3-4 times a year we get a large run, for us it is 500-1500 pcs. All of our equipment is paid for. So I plan on keeping it. If need be, I can run the 3-4 jobs per year for a couple hours if I have to. I have no problem with that. But it's the day to day that I could never do. We are just too busy, and I did it all myself for the first 10 years of the business.I just did 2 jobs that normally I would have to turn away. Just way too many colors for us to print. I have samples in our showroom of dtf and just go over it with them. They were totally fine..and know something, they look great.Once I learn to use the DTF, bye bye old lady Sue.