"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
LOL.... At first I thought.... Why did he take a photo of a magazine?. I did not realise it was a print.I can stare at these prints for hours.
Not really cool art work but to see your work in a MLB Pittsburgh Pirates locker room worn by the players and coach is cool.....
Danny I swear I am coming to your shop and your teaching me all you know.. DEAL WITH IT.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 22, 2013, 01:33:56 PMDanny I swear I am coming to your shop and your teaching me all you know.. DEAL WITH IT.LOL, you aren't going to learn very much..... that's the truth! haha.....
For Giligan- "Like"
Here's another one we are printing today...... Came out pretty nice, this one is customer supplied artwork. Ended up pulling a color out of the sep on this so this is 8 colors total including 2 whites and a black. Had to print on both white and black shirts so we needed the black in there..... The orange color is just red/yellow blends on this one, no orange color printed.
Quote from: DannyGruninger on November 22, 2013, 01:32:49 PMHere's another one we are printing today...... Came out pretty nice, this one is customer supplied artwork. Ended up pulling a color out of the sep on this so this is 8 colors total including 2 whites and a black. Had to print on both white and black shirts so we needed the black in there..... The orange color is just red/yellow blends on this one, no orange color printed.Did you have any issues getting that orange right or did it look right from the start? Years ago before any of us knew what we were doing we struggled on a job where yellow and red we're mixing to create orange and we fought that job for more than a few hours. We had the 8 color centurian at the time and had one empty print head and just made the orange a spot color. Only recently have we tried creating orange without the spot color and the last job came out great but the job before that did not. Similar setup and same guy doing the seps but completely different results. I still think flesh tones are tough and oranges as well, but I remember the days 5 years ago where everything was difficult. Some of the stuff that we don't even think about nowadays would have taken up half a day of shop time to just set up 5 years ago.
Quote from: alan802 on November 23, 2013, 04:57:24 PMQuote from: DannyGruninger on November 22, 2013, 01:32:49 PMHere's another one we are printing today...... Came out pretty nice, this one is customer supplied artwork. Ended up pulling a color out of the sep on this so this is 8 colors total including 2 whites and a black. Had to print on both white and black shirts so we needed the black in there..... The orange color is just red/yellow blends on this one, no orange color printed.Did you have any issues getting that orange right or did it look right from the start? Years ago before any of us knew what we were doing we struggled on a job where yellow and red we're mixing to create orange and we fought that job for more than a few hours. We had the 8 color centurian at the time and had one empty print head and just made the orange a spot color. Only recently have we tried creating orange without the spot color and the last job came out great but the job before that did not. Similar setup and same guy doing the seps but completely different results. I still think flesh tones are tough and oranges as well, but I remember the days 5 years ago where everything was difficult. Some of the stuff that we don't even think about nowadays would have taken up half a day of shop time to just set up 5 years ago.Alan, for this print and most we are doing now we setup on press, do a couple test prints to dial in registration/let ink start flowing then print. Rarely are we making many changes these days but a few years ago we would be burning new screens, mixing new colors, you name it LOL..... I can totally relate to your last comment as that's where I was not too long ago! Learning curve has been cut down just from testing it seems, but a couple basic things that have helped me with the blends to get a good orange. Most always we print yellow after red(even on this sep artist wanted red after yellow if I remember correctly but I'm almost always setting on press red then yellow), and the yellow ink gets roughly 10% more halftone base added to the ink to help the transition of the blends. The biggest factor for us in getting great blends has been the actual ink we are using, high tension mesh, and very sharp blades but typically we print the dark color of the fade first and let the lighter color transition on top of it. Right now I have an ink deal with WM plastics and contractually we are only allowed to print their inks so thats what we are using and I've been happy with their inks for sim process combined with a couple bases they offer in order to get decent blends like that orange above. Ink is probably the biggest key though getting the transparency of it correct, as you already knew. No magic here, just mixing inks right and having your stuff on press dialed in to get those results.