"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
That wasn't to bad. I was expecting to get totally trashed. Brandt's artwork was great "retail quality" but not what I would every suggest doing with DTF or DTG. However, when you get a customer who insists on printing a few shirts with a lot of colors, DTF is a great way to go. Every tool has it's use. As a side note, when the two prints were shown to my staff side by side, more picked the halftoned without black for the faded into the shirt look.
Thanks for taking the time to post back the results. One thing that is cool is that from when you said you sent the files to when you posted this example it was only 3 days which is super fast.The premise of this thread however was looking at DTF as a replacement for screen printing, and this is a great example of how this will never replace screen print. Just another tool you can use for the right instance like truckers, totes, neck labels, very small prints both in size or print run. I know a company that use theirs mostly for neck labels and long sleeve prints since long sleeve prints are a pain. I also know a company that uses them for neck labels, but doesn't have people forward thinking that it opens it to being able to do a full color label as an upsell, and they still just do one colors.If you don't like the feel of a heat pressed plastisol print, you'll never like the feel of any DTF transfer. If it could have a more silicon feel it would be a little more premium feeling in my opinion. Unless there is a fairytale discharge transfer that comes along, I think the physics of a transfer isn't able to get any better, it's gluing a sheet of something to fabric. It can be a good product when used right, but this isn't some revolution like people like to talk about.
I had a great DTF use case yesterday. I accidentally burned a sleeve on a recent job. Front, back and left sleeve print. Multiple colors. I told the client I would replace it but it would be with a transfer so it won't be an exact match. They didn't care and appreciated the replacement. That may not work for every client, but in this case I'm glad I didn't need to setup 3 print locations for 1 shirt lol.
These will be the one where he killed the black and half toned the whole image. This is done to reduce the hand and it definitely does that. But it looks terrible. It also had dots not stick to the shirt and this made it look even worse. We followed his instructions but maybe we did something wrong in that regard and some tweaking the dots would not stay behind. But it still looks terrible. I would not sell this version under any context. I will wash both when I can see how they feel after a couple washes. For me without a single doubt DTG is better than this DTF. My Mlink DTG was better than this DTF in feel and hand. I still think there is a market for both DTG/DTF but its not me yet.
We, are buying about $700.00 in DTF a wk. Customers are coming in asking for it specifically. Oddly enough, it's not even only people (in the business of apparel). It's end users. Maybe 50/50. The general public is getting to be aware of it.
What I think some will over look is if that customer doesn't like DTF because the shop doing it doesn't do it right or understand art that is best suited for it or the customer isn't understanding what its best for...then not only lose that customer for future DTF but maybe entirely. Not that your shop is one of those, not saying that at all. I am seeing an uptick of people saying "how do you print shirts, I don't want DTF or DTG" type thing.
Quote from: Dottonedan on March 01, 2024, 11:35:27 AMWe, are buying about $700.00 in DTF a wk. Customers are coming in asking for it specifically. Oddly enough, it's not even only people (in the business of apparel). It's end users. Maybe 50/50. The general public is getting to be aware of it.I am seeing a uptick of people saying "how do you print shirts, I don't want DTF or DTG" type thing. But to be fair I am also seeing a uptick of people asking if we can DTF something.