I work for a company in SD and we use 2 layers of vinyl to get the 'right color' on backlits. The problem we have is when the backlit is not lit the colors look too dark (oranges look red, greens look black, etc)...
for those of you that use only one layer do you lay the ink on much thicker? I believe that we run our ink on 4pass.. and i have heard from a few people that it's not necessary to lay ink that think as well as laying another layer of vinyl, it's overkill..
any ideas?
yeah the OP's question was about stock cut trans.
for printed, I've found the best middle ground by mirror print on clear acrylic (overstrike, double pass, high density [depending on RIP]) 2nd surface, and lam with white trans.
overly color critical clients get print on trans first surface, mirror on clear second surface, on white acrylic (neither print over, double, etc)
I do it that way for the 'larger error margin due to thickness of the substrate"
double-layer for good clients, double-strike for the "cheap ones" (although, we give them the option but they always seem to want to save $$$)
stock trans. colored vinyl? never a need to do anything but cut/apply.
so on the prints that are double strike you are only applying one layer of vinyl?
We only apply to polycarbonate second surface. We apply 2 layers of 2nd surface printed transparent vinyl followed by a layer of white translucent diffuser.
I guess what I'm trying to figure out is if we are using too much ink. We subcontract to a smaller sign company and they seem to think we are using way too much ink on our vinyl to be applying 2 layers of it and I tend to agree but I wanted to see what the industry normal was...
any help or advice is appreciated! thanks!
Interesting method. But it seems to me that your prints would end up too dark during the day, because of those 2 layers stacked right on each other.
Try this: Apply 1 layer of second surface printed transparent vinyl, then apply 1 layer of second surface printed white translucent vinyl.
This should result in more even daytime/nighttime colors, and has the bonus of having only 2 layers of vinyl, not 3.
Interesting method. But it seems to me that your prints would end up too dark during the day, because of those 2 layers stacked right on each other.
Try this: Apply 1 layer of second surface printed transparent vinyl, then apply 1 layer of second surface printed white translucent vinyl.
This should result in more even daytime/nighttime colors, and has the bonus of having only 2 layers of vinyl, not 3.
Is this a practice you follow? If so, do you have problems with your white translucent lining up with your clear? I did a few tests a year ago and our problem was that the vinyls appeared to feed at different rates and the translucent would be an inch (give or take) longer than the clear but they were both 2mil thick materials...
thanks for your help and advice!