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Computers and Software => Computers and Software - General => Topic started by: Frog on March 04, 2022, 03:01:23 PM
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I have a job coming up that will require DTF transfers. The logo art is a jpg, that will apparently print the white background which I don't want. I understand the basic process of selecting the background, inverting the selection, and applying a mask, and saving that.
This process seems to favor art with distinct contrast. My design includes a fade to white. I can't seem to avoid a distinct cutoff and sharp edge. Will this always be a problem with this method, even with the tolerance set to 1?
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Yes as lone as it has fades and your coming from a Jpeg image, DTF is not going to print fades anyway unless you know how to convert the art to color halftones, I would tell you how but I just learn myself.
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You might try the background eraser tool in PS, but it can be tough with the white fade.
Steve
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You might try the background eraser tool in PS, but it can be tough with the white fade.
Steve
I think that I am on my way of solving this by using the background eraser tool in different opacities and different diameters on the image which has already been made transparent with the select/inverse/mask method.
I don't know if these images will translate well here, but the first is the crappy fade, and the second is after I started fiddling about.
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with something like your example, I would delete the entire background/gradient then recreate the background. faster and easier for me.
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with something like your example, I would delete the entire background/gradient then recreate the background. faster and easier for me.
I wouldn't know where to even begin to do that with the single layer jpg logo I was furnished.
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Andy, send it to me and I will take a look...
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I think what you are describing is one of the limitations of DTF.
It can’t handle fades. Hard to put the white base and glue powder on fades.
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I think what you are describing is one of the limitations of DTF.
It can’t handle fades. Hard to put the white base and glue powder on fades.
If going on white, can the white base be eliminated?
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You can eliminate the white underbase but the transfers will not adhere and hold up as well.
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Depends on the printer, I have a Mutoh and put in Light Cyan and Magenta which helps when printing faded areas.
I just did an order without the white base and got a great result. Their RIP has a setting for White shirts.
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Depends on the printer, I have a Mutoh and put in Light Cyan and Magenta which helps when printing faded areas.
I just did an order without the white base and got a great result. Their RIP has a setting for White shirts.
Can I just real quick derail this thread and ask about the glue powder you are using. We started printing DTF on our Brother GTX Pro yesterday. The results are real good but we don`t have a good choice of glue powder here. The transfers feel really stiff and have zero stretch. How is your glue behaving? Is it stretchable?
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I don’t think DTF has much stretch, pretty much like a transfer.
There are a lot of glue powder suppliers, try and get a few samples.