letterman7
New Member
Hi gang,
One of my clients is looking to mimic a set of signs that are at another location. The signs are created with a process that I'm not familiar with - it almost looks like they've been direct printed, but I've never seen it on metal before. The signs are .040 aluminum with a dull finish, but that could be a sprayed topcoat. It's definitely not a laminate... but the process I can't figure out. It's a straight black copy with toned photographs - I couldn't detect any halftone patterns in the photos. When I ran my fingers over the copy and photo it was perfectly smooth - I'd expect a print or etching to have some ridge to it, but this is flat as paper. Now, I admit I haven't seen a direct print item before, so I don't have anything to compare that to, but anyone have an idea of how this was done?
Thanks,
Rick
One of my clients is looking to mimic a set of signs that are at another location. The signs are created with a process that I'm not familiar with - it almost looks like they've been direct printed, but I've never seen it on metal before. The signs are .040 aluminum with a dull finish, but that could be a sprayed topcoat. It's definitely not a laminate... but the process I can't figure out. It's a straight black copy with toned photographs - I couldn't detect any halftone patterns in the photos. When I ran my fingers over the copy and photo it was perfectly smooth - I'd expect a print or etching to have some ridge to it, but this is flat as paper. Now, I admit I haven't seen a direct print item before, so I don't have anything to compare that to, but anyone have an idea of how this was done?
Thanks,
Rick