Pixels Are Bad Mmmkay?
New Member
We had a customer stop by today with a shallow extruded sign panel that had the graphic applied to the inside of the panel. How the manufacturer printed the graphic and applied it to the face has me completely stumped. The perimeter of the face appeared to be white polycarbonate or acrylic (or clear with white applied to the inside surface) and the graphic applied to the inside appeared to be a white print media. However, the graphic showing through the panel was very vivid and the appearance on the inside of the panel was somewhat muted but still very visible, so one would assume that the graphic had to printed on the adhesive side of the media. The only other way I could see to accomplish this would be to print in reverse on clear media, then apply a diffuser film over the top of that. But the fact that the edges of the face appear to be white has me scratching my head as well, because the panel would have to be clear for the graphic to show through the front.
Has anyone seen anything like this, and if so how can this be accomplished? I've never seen anything quite like it before. Is it possible that the inside of the entire panel was printed directly onto the panel and was then formed after printing? Can that even be done? Whatever adhesive media was used on the inside of the panel was trimmed around the inside edges of the extrusion, so it could just be a layer of diffuser film over the print, but the white edges of the panel is what really has me confused. If a panel can even be printed and then heat formed after the fact, they would have had to print the background with white ink.
I hope my description makes sense. I should have taken pictures to explain it better, but I didn't. Any insight into this manufacturing process would be very much appreciated.
Has anyone seen anything like this, and if so how can this be accomplished? I've never seen anything quite like it before. Is it possible that the inside of the entire panel was printed directly onto the panel and was then formed after printing? Can that even be done? Whatever adhesive media was used on the inside of the panel was trimmed around the inside edges of the extrusion, so it could just be a layer of diffuser film over the print, but the white edges of the panel is what really has me confused. If a panel can even be printed and then heat formed after the fact, they would have had to print the background with white ink.
I hope my description makes sense. I should have taken pictures to explain it better, but I didn't. Any insight into this manufacturing process would be very much appreciated.