Double Diamond
New Member
I am covering 2 large 4'x10' white lexan faces that have had cut vinyl on both sides and are yellowing. The new image is a dark photo of food items and I am trying to avoid using transluscent due to the cost and no short rolls available. I have had very good luck using orocal 651 to letter faces and they look great, and even had one printed over a year ago on clear layed on white.
I am thinking of using white to cover the old visible yellowing and have not printed in house for faces before and am needing to know if anyone has had good luck with printing on white 3640 and laminating then applying to lighted faces.
This is our first in house printing on a transluscent face and also need some advice. We are using a Roland sp-540v with versaworks. I have read somewhere that we need to set it to end at the starting point and print again. The exact alignment that large concerns me.
What has worked for you? Are we crazy to print on standard vinyl? Again, I have lettered and overlayed transluscent faces for over 20 years with standard and intermediate vinyl with 100% success, but I do think we may be pushing our luck on a digital print this size.
I appreciate your advice and sharing of your years of experience on this.
Joe
I am thinking of using white to cover the old visible yellowing and have not printed in house for faces before and am needing to know if anyone has had good luck with printing on white 3640 and laminating then applying to lighted faces.
This is our first in house printing on a transluscent face and also need some advice. We are using a Roland sp-540v with versaworks. I have read somewhere that we need to set it to end at the starting point and print again. The exact alignment that large concerns me.
What has worked for you? Are we crazy to print on standard vinyl? Again, I have lettered and overlayed transluscent faces for over 20 years with standard and intermediate vinyl with 100% success, but I do think we may be pushing our luck on a digital print this size.
I appreciate your advice and sharing of your years of experience on this.
Joe