tulsagraphics
New Member
Hi guys,
I've printed a lot of things over the years, but haven't seen this issue before. Check out the "droplet artifacts" in the pictures (all part of the same print). 18x24 yard sign, printed on IJ-35. The entire job was for 40 signs with about 30 masters, and there were a lot of busy graphics, but I'm certain that at least 95% of the prints came out perfectly (if not all of them). Anything less would have been too hard to overlook.
- The red and green text is about 1.25" tall
What I know so far:
Customer emailed me these photos today. They haven't yet paid for them, and their 2 month temporary ice rink ended about a week ago. So they used them for the entire duration of their event, snapped a few pics after they were done with them (presumably), then threw the signs away before emailing me that they weren't happy with the print quality. (seriously?)
It gets a little more hairy:
This customer hasn't complained about print quality in the past, but they have become quite rude and unprofessional as of late. So it's hard to tell if they are being genuine or not. They have a significant outstanding balance on this project (for an 800sq.ft. ice rink wrap, many large banners, etc), and it seems like they are trying to weasel their way out of paying the full amount by tying the print quality on this yard sign (or a handful of them) to the rest of the project (implying that our products are sub-par quality -- which is absolutely infuriating because we take quality very seriously). I haven't seen pics of the other signs or layouts yet (if they even have them), but I wanted to do a little research before responding to them.
Anyway... does this look like something that could happen in a failed print? Or maybe something in the environment?
For the moment I'm just trying to determine whether or not it's possible that my printer could have produced something like this. (I only have these photos to work with since the customer threw out the actual signs)
Any other thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated!
I've printed a lot of things over the years, but haven't seen this issue before. Check out the "droplet artifacts" in the pictures (all part of the same print). 18x24 yard sign, printed on IJ-35. The entire job was for 40 signs with about 30 masters, and there were a lot of busy graphics, but I'm certain that at least 95% of the prints came out perfectly (if not all of them). Anything less would have been too hard to overlook.
- The red and green text is about 1.25" tall
What I know so far:
Customer emailed me these photos today. They haven't yet paid for them, and their 2 month temporary ice rink ended about a week ago. So they used them for the entire duration of their event, snapped a few pics after they were done with them (presumably), then threw the signs away before emailing me that they weren't happy with the print quality. (seriously?)
It gets a little more hairy:
This customer hasn't complained about print quality in the past, but they have become quite rude and unprofessional as of late. So it's hard to tell if they are being genuine or not. They have a significant outstanding balance on this project (for an 800sq.ft. ice rink wrap, many large banners, etc), and it seems like they are trying to weasel their way out of paying the full amount by tying the print quality on this yard sign (or a handful of them) to the rest of the project (implying that our products are sub-par quality -- which is absolutely infuriating because we take quality very seriously). I haven't seen pics of the other signs or layouts yet (if they even have them), but I wanted to do a little research before responding to them.
Anyway... does this look like something that could happen in a failed print? Or maybe something in the environment?
For the moment I'm just trying to determine whether or not it's possible that my printer could have produced something like this. (I only have these photos to work with since the customer threw out the actual signs)
Any other thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated!