Customer demanded Papyrus, also showed us a swirly she liked, so we had to build the circular logo from that. This was pretty much customer driven.
However, I will say this. I am printing at the moment, and the colors are turning out quite rich and dark. Like the transparencies are way to dark. I've never really had this issue before with transparencies. It is an EPS file, so maybe I should have made it a TIFF first and avoided a chance of the transparencies being read wrong. Any ideas?
...small scale test print would have confirmed your suspicions.... I make it a habit before going full scale........
JP
Of course! It is a good habit for us, but we have our machines so dialed in, we never really have issues. Complacency is a ***** sometimes!...small scale test print would have confirmed your suspicions.... I make it a habit before going full scale........
JP
Of course! It is a good habit for us, but we have our machines so dialed in, we never really have issues. Complacency is a ***** sometimes!
that is why I said complacency is a beeotchhh sometimes...cough, cough,...except in this case I suppose..........
JP
nah, I get special deals there. no biggie. I also have a rep to uphold, I don't like anything but sewn banners. (imagine that, me having a good reputation) be nice now!For a banner that small... that's obviously only going to be used for a grand opening.. so not so long... you could use tape hem.
Craig, I even stroked the font cause I just couldn't leave it as weak as it was. So you are not alone in that.I like it, has a nice upscale image, just perfect for the customer that will be shopping there.
There seems to be a trend that I'm not real fond of and that's weaker fonts like this used where bolder fonts should be, in this case bold was a normal choice for grand opening and I think you all did a fine job bring out the grand opening in a good positive image, believe the background really helped.