NY Mark
New Member
Hello All, I started my journey in sign making in about 2000, back then vehicle graphics were easier due to the many flat panels available, now it's a nightmare.....Printing for "wraps" was in the infant stages as the UV inks were not something I would advise for long term fade.
I left the Biz for a while to go back to school for Engineering, re-entering signage from a more Electrical and Pylon design angle. I noticed that inks had come ALONG way in a short time.
Now that I am retired, and have a lucrative side hustle, I am finding that a lot of the vehicle graphics I quote for I get solely because I can Design, Produce, and Install in Half the time it takes for a Printed Wrap.
Don't get me wrong, Wraps are COOL and if the client can afford it I will gladly refer them to a shop in my area, but I would say that 7/10 will give me the work.
I think Photoshop and any program that can produce awesome gradients and shadows to produce AMAZING results has it's place. What I think is missing is the skill set for vinyl.
I see the lost art of Outlines, drop shadows, and correct color choices all the time, and don't get me started on Font usage!
I admire a good Wrap, and applaud you people that can and do turn a profit, but I also still see Hand painted and lettered signs that invoke a memory of days gone. They still inspire me when I get out the old books and see there work. Those books are still available online.
In closing, I have to say that after 24 years I still see 95% of the signs I have made still looking Good, with Oracal 751.....(Yes Tomato Red too)....
I left the Biz for a while to go back to school for Engineering, re-entering signage from a more Electrical and Pylon design angle. I noticed that inks had come ALONG way in a short time.
Now that I am retired, and have a lucrative side hustle, I am finding that a lot of the vehicle graphics I quote for I get solely because I can Design, Produce, and Install in Half the time it takes for a Printed Wrap.
Don't get me wrong, Wraps are COOL and if the client can afford it I will gladly refer them to a shop in my area, but I would say that 7/10 will give me the work.
I think Photoshop and any program that can produce awesome gradients and shadows to produce AMAZING results has it's place. What I think is missing is the skill set for vinyl.
I see the lost art of Outlines, drop shadows, and correct color choices all the time, and don't get me started on Font usage!
I admire a good Wrap, and applaud you people that can and do turn a profit, but I also still see Hand painted and lettered signs that invoke a memory of days gone. They still inspire me when I get out the old books and see there work. Those books are still available online.
In closing, I have to say that after 24 years I still see 95% of the signs I have made still looking Good, with Oracal 751.....(Yes Tomato Red too)....