I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes.
Click to Support Signs101 ...
This sort of endless toing and froing over one vehicle wrap just does my head in.
I do pretty much what you've done - make suggestions and offer a clean design.
If they decide to make their van look like a brochure designed by their receptionist I do the job, take their money and move on.
It sounds like you're getting stuck on the only step that needs human intervention, the advanced ink limit swatch.
This limits the amount of combined inks, so just look along at where the combos start to bleed and that's your limit.
For A and B it's usually around 190 on my Roland, and 200 ish...
If you're scraping wet the whole thing down with soapy water so it falls off rather than smears.
Old mate Cookie has video of the soaking deal. Never done it personally it but looks like something worth trying.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqI2nEj1vo4&feature=youtu.be
I noticed the edges starting to curl up on the bench while I was waiting for the client to pick them up.
I rolled them up with the print outside hoping it would settle once on the car.
I guess not.
Running 4 printers off Production House 10 here.
It rarely if ever crashes, no transparency problems and profiling is a breeze.
It's a very productive setup.
I installed Illustrator CC and the Winplot plugin doesn't seem to show.
I reinstalled the latest version of Winplot.
Anyone know what's up?
CS6 is still running but it's a bit of a pain to have to go back to it all the time.
We bought the Pantone color manager software and the new swatch books.
If your rip has a colour matching table see if the new ones are in it, otherwise convert to cmyk in Illustrator and check against the swatch.
You have a Summa - do your contour cutting with Winplot.
Cutserver gave me a couple of untraceable errors in big jobs so we just started using Winplot and it's not let us down once.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.