CENTERVILLE SIGNS
New Member
confused
There isn't one answer here. Depends on the vehicle, the overall appearance, how the lines on one part of the side line up with another part of the same side, and most importantly, the client's opinion. When we find ourselves in one of those situations, we often pull the client into the discussion. We have a couple of clients that are VERY detail oriented, and we've discovered that it works better if they have the opportunity to weigh in on that type of situation. And there is no one consistent answer (level vs. follow body line).
I always have a drawing showing how the graphic will situate on the truck. If the client signs off on it, I am good to go. I don't ask them to decide, but if they bring it up I explain my reasoning.
I use a level, but only after I have established a horizontal reference point. It has an adjustable vial so I can match the slope of the established horizontal reference and transfer that angled line to the rest of the truck. In that way, my graphics can be lined up to the same horizontal reference. Especially for text and geometric shapes, I find if there is an internal logic between the seperate elements it looks better. One thing that bugs me on a lot of installs is text set at different angles (unless it was designed to be that way).
View attachment 144655
You just need to learn how, and when, to use the tool. The final arbiter is how it looks when complete.I don't see that tool as an accurate means. Whatever surface that vehicle is on is held to different standards. Say for instance, most vehicles today have very few horizontal one can rely on. Therefore, if your installer has a slightly slanted floor from which he is working, throwing off his eye, the mechanics of the physical vehicle will be all over the place.
Just had a bunch of dumpsters in here for lettering. If we used that level, they would've looked horrendous. The wheels are different sizes, throwing everything off, the rails are all welded by eye and the mullions are all different sizes. Our bay floors are 100% level, but the dumpsters weren't. We put about 9 of them out in the last 3 weeks and all looked level to the eye when being hauled. That's where the customer had the most concern. Therefore, we listened to his wishes and made him happy. We have almost 20 more to go in the next month or so.
Which one do we like best?