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Natedev, google dye sublimation. You'll be able to find out whatever you want to know about dye sub. Conde' Systems in Mobile, Alabama and Tropical Graphics in Florida are two companies that sell dye sub inks, carrier paper, and many, many products you can put images on. If you want to do full...
Printing, sorting sizes, burning, folding and packing. It all takes time. And most people want a big image on the back and small image on left chest. That's 2 burns for every shirt. I'm probably a lot slower than you...I haven't worked to get my speed up. I discovered early on that I'd rather...
Welcome, Cressida. Good luck with your sticker enterprise, but if I were you, I would lean more toward banners as a starting point. Banners are more in line with the "sign" end of the business and they are great learning tools to hone your design and layout skills on. If you sell a few nice...
If you use the right shirts and dye sub inks, there is no need for iron on sheets...the image goes directly into the fabric of the shirt...no shiny, slick feeling transfer is left behind. I have shirts with my logo on them that I've been wearing for years with no fade. The quality and durability...
I believe srt10x3 is referring to dye sublimation, which is a whole different process than your common Avery heat transfer that you buy at WalMart and print with a 40 dollar HP deskjet. Dye sublimation is a very durable imaging process that makes the image become part of the shirt...looks great...
Select your text and go to effects/contour. When the design central-outline box opens, select outline in the dropdown. Set the width to however big you want, offset to zero, copies to 1, and miter limit changes how sharp or round the corners are. Make sure the outline is a different color from...
For this particular job, I would probably do it with a similar font as described by signsbydale. MicrogrammaDBolExt looks pretty close. Convert text to curves, lay it on top of your picture and work with nodes till you get it right. If I didn't have a font that was already so close, the box...
Don't know if this will help, but my next move would be to shut everything down and restart your computer. Maybe Flexi will recognize the new font then. A good restart fixes lots of things.
I don't know what your budget is, but Corel and Co-Cut are cheap enough you could probably buy new. They don't cost 3 grand like some of the other signmaking software does. I'd look into the new X3 version of Corel. As far as Corel clipart goes, version 8 had the most extensive collection. It is...
Try this. Draw the square and choose your fill. Then select your text and hit Edit/Copy Properties From/Fill and click on the square. It filled the text correctly without squeezing the fill out of shape on my computer.
What's happening is that when you send a job to the cutter, it begins rolling the vinyl back and forth and ends up snatching the roll off the roll holders. It is even worse on a full roll because it's too heavy to snatch off so your machine is taking the worst of the punishment. Or your vinyl...
$400.00 and $200.00 ... those prices are so cheap it's hard to believe you're going to get anything for that amount. I have quite a bit of equipment and I wouldn't sell the oldest most worn-out machine I have for $400.00. I am almost certain that if you buy one of these, you will find that it...
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