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Looks like he wants $16,400.00 for the two walls wthout knowing what he is putting on the walls. He is not a designer so he has to hire that out. So I would say he is flying blind at this point and winging it and hoping for the best.
If he was an artist I would say giving a price without...
King ColorCore® | King Plastic Corporation
you need the black, white material, I have used the .25", do not see the .125" thickness unless it is a Hermes product
So after you get your printer, you will come back to ask how to create something with your life.
There is no Sage on here to give you a magical answer to all your questions.
"Any input", yea, go with new technology and get a latex and an annuity.
Kinda lost, I'm lost, never quoted a wall job without knowing what was going to be put on it. Maybe that's where the expression came from about throwing it on the wall to see if it will stick.
Here's some advice, put that $20k into an Annuity and get a job as a postman. You will then get a retirement check at 65 and cash in the Annuity and buy that Bass boat you've had your eye on all those years. Your kids will enjoy it since they are healthy from not being around all that pvc...
You bid a painted wall job without a design, that's like a mail order bride, you don't know what your getting into. It might be the reproduction of a 20' whiskey bottle with a jungle motif background or a single 3" red dot on a white white wall.
I was going to do some work for Seth but had some health problems and could not do them for him.
This was one I did for a building on all their floors .
Always like your 5'6"-6'' tall people in your sign drawings which to me is a great selling point.
Here are some with .5"=1' they are in vector so colors can be changed
Thanks Rick, he explains it better than I did. I still handdraw things using a scale rule to get a better feel for something before going to the computer.
It's my head and I will do what I like.
Sometimes work in 3/16"=1' or 1/8"=1', like the blueprints I am working off of. I can design and convert scales in my head at the same time.
It is a good right side brain exercise.
I always work in .5"=1' or 1"=1' all the time in Illustrator. I just set up the rulers in preferences with gridline every inch and do the math in my head.
Grew up drawing with a scale rule so using a computer with rulers and a transform tool was really easy.
Check out Astute Graphics plug ins to...
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