I asked the same thing. Front of house does stupid stuff. Once it is quoted and approved not much I can do.So I'll bite, why weren't these just printed on a roll?
I hand cut them out right to the edge. Ken, who cut them on the guillotine, said it was perfect.If you cutting these with a guillotine paper cutter I pity the guy that has to cut these and then clean up all the PSA off the blades etc.
I do not understand.it would waste Kraft paper but you cold sandwich between the two for an easier run. waste material or time with your method...but yeah print on a wide format printer and be done
I do not understand.it would waste Kraft paper but you cold sandwich between the two for an easier run. waste material or time with your method...but yeah print on a wide format printer and be done
Ah, yes. I had this idea previously on another job. It did not work. Perhaps I did something wrong, but the "waste" paper underneath started folding and tearing and causing tons of problems.You put the laminate on your roller, and kraft paper as what you're laminating... Then you just feed the sheets into your laminator. The kraft paper is used as a waste, and prevents the laminate from sticking to the roller.
You waste a $20 worth of kraft paper.... But you save however long it took you to tape them up.
We do a lot of screenprinting and have to laminate certain things after when they want anti graffiti, we don't do liquid coating -so it's the method we use. I think we pay $100 for a few hundred ft of kraft paper.
We have several coating machines. These needed briteline mounting film, specifically. That can only be done in my department on the SEAL laminator.Could be worth calling local print shops to see if they would offer cheap varnishing? I worked for a place that used to send a lot of their Indigo sheets to another printer for this.
Seal 62Pro has crowned rollers...work from the middle, you just want pressure set so rollers tough. Higher pressure does not help laminating it hurts. It will cause alignment at nip(where rollers touch) to be misaligned. You should be able to web the printer up with pressure sensitive film on top or get lintless pressure sensitive laminate and load a roll of craft on the bottom, basically sandwiching your prints between the two. Do a ton tube search for Scott Tessier. he has a whole video on your machine.Ah, yes. I had this idea previously on another job. It did not work. Perhaps I did something wrong, but the "waste" paper underneath started folding and tearing and causing tons of problems.
I have a SEAL 62 Pro.
I have been told by techs that the "barrel" shaped rollers cause paper to tear quite often.
That is a nifty machine. However, I was laminating it with Briteline mounting film(clear double sided adhesive). I have doubts it would work on that machine and I would have to cut the rolls down to size.Unless it needed to be waterproof, then subcontract with a UV coating. Otherwise your print vendor may have this machine.
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