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have an s70675 that replaced our old roland. its amazing, the orange ink really expands your spectrum. its also super fast even at higher quality. blows our roland out of the water in speed....it does not cut though.
hope this is at all relevant to the 80 series
if you want it to look good you really do have to redesign it, it can be a can of worms. especially if the building is big. you can always try scanning the plans in and see if u can get away with some red lines and arrows though
wipe it wiht some rubbing alcohol and tell the client it should work itself out in a few days after going through a day night hot cold cycle... you will always find problems on new frost, they actually do work themselves out though
exactly, i was going to ask what you were saving your file out as, i usually have the best luck with pdf files.
that said is your cut line a stroke with a white filled box? i keep my contour cut lines on there own, so it should be only a stroke with no fill, that might be where the program is...
hey all,
we started making our own lightboxes using aluvision aluminum and gaskets
we solvent print onto Samba FR fabric.
my problem is that when we sew the gasket strips on we have to be very accurate since the samba has little to no stretch to it.
Does anyone know of a nice fabric that is...
good luck
test out the material on the cart , if it lasts a few days go for it. Another solution if the wrap is meant to be permanent is to use seal-it pens and primer on the edges
we jsut got a mimaki cutter for a specific paper cutting job (not my idea)
wwe dont have the disk to get a legal copy of finecut, anyone ever use an alternate program for a mimaki plotter?
sign a rama franchise' do a fast and dirty intro course in florida for new franchisees its pretty basic but maybe they let you buy into it and just do the training so everyone can start with the same base knowledge, for Wraps i would check out justin pate's classes or videos
yea, obviously a laminator is much more reliable and efficient, but if you have the time and not the money maybe this can get them through this job they are already in the middle of
i worked at a shop years ago that wet laminated because they had it down to a science and it left no silvering.
the process is as follows
buy 2 12 inch window squeegee, like at the car wash
fill up 2 spray bottles with a half a capful of baby shampoo or unscented laundry detergent (yes...
we are trying to cut snowflake style designs out of paper, i have not had success on our laser doing this, next try is seeing if i can get the plotter to cut it, its a graphtec
any tips tricks would be awesome
thanks
in nyc alot of them are done by hand by illustrators/artists.....i imagine u can jsut use chalkboard paint and Direct to Surface print them though, vinyl hates chalkboards for the record
i cant do what you need but i would recommend you dont close your mind to the idea of LED's, channell letters use them now and they last longer than the bulbs. they really simplify the whole procces
if you are intent on not using screws but the sheet metal your are adhering too is very smooth and vinyl friendly
then i suggest you cover and area with high tack vinyl to protect the awning facade and use some 2 part epoxy or 2p10 glue with activator....any serious industrial adhesive, hope...
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