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Doming – Using for sample making
Wow! I’m glad I found you guys! I’ve been struggling with something and after reading some threads here I know I’ve come to the right place.
OK, so here’s our situation. We’ve been in business a couple of years sourcing promotional products for customers from all over the world. Recently we’ve designed a couple of metal name badges with a patent pending. They are high-end badges suitable for markets such as boutique hotels, luxury retail, etc.
I LOVE machinery and to get my hands dirty, however my partner and I thought it best to concentrate on sales for now and have someone else "get their hands dirty." We’d be able to build business quicker by not spending time fabricating when we could be using that time for sales.
We control our quality very carefully from our partner factories and things are really starting to go well.
OK, enough about us… now for the problem. Speed is everything for us! We are marketing heavily to the hotel industry and our prospects need samples. It can take up to 10 days to get a sample in from our factories. So we started doing doming on a small scale to get product samples out quicker. Many products we sell are domed anyway so it works. A customer can call at 12pm and we’ll have a sample out that same day. But it’s still taking TOO long.
Here are the problems:
1) Using an inkjet we’ve printed customer logos on glossy photo paper but logos run when dome is applied. We fixed this by applying a laminating sheet over the logo. All of this is too time consuming because everything is hand cut, etc.2) We have a color laser printer but it’s used mostly for letterhead, etc and I’m not too impressed with it’s ability to match PMS colors etc, which are important when presenting samples. However, ink dries immediately which is a plus.
I’m thinking the best route for us to go is to purchase inkjet vinyl, buy 1 of those CraftRobo machines and be done with it. But I’m not sure of exactly what to buy in terms of vinyl, etc.
We want to be able to get these out in minutes not hours. We’re using a UV curable epoxy which can set in 20 minutes. Will the colors run on the inkjet vinyl if it doesn’t dry long enough?
3) Equipment – we cannot justify buying a $10,000 vinyl printer/cutter just to run samples so we need to use equipment we have and easy to obtain media.
I look forward to hearing from everyone and I’m really enjoying the site.
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