It's not too late to help a poor printer save a job. I could use a little shared life experience about varnishing indigo sheets.
Are flags going up? Or isn't it a big deal? Why should it be a big deal?
I know HP pushes UV coating, first screen and then the K-coater (they still in business?) I have spot printed Indigo sheets with varnish, in the past, with no problem. Now I need to flood varnish both sides of 100# cover preprinted on a 3050. The varnish MUST be Braden Suthin Tuff Scuff, a 100% solids concoction.
The only issue I know of with varnish is that they all yellow when exposed to heat, like in the delivery or in a truck in Las Vegas. They should still dry just fine, right? They would dry on plastic, so why not on an indigo sheet
This might not sound like a big deal, but there are 6500 12x18 sheets, and that's a lot of clicks. Call this homework. Yea or Nay printers?
John Lind
Cranberry Township, PA
724-776-4718
Are flags going up? Or isn't it a big deal? Why should it be a big deal?
I know HP pushes UV coating, first screen and then the K-coater (they still in business?) I have spot printed Indigo sheets with varnish, in the past, with no problem. Now I need to flood varnish both sides of 100# cover preprinted on a 3050. The varnish MUST be Braden Suthin Tuff Scuff, a 100% solids concoction.
The only issue I know of with varnish is that they all yellow when exposed to heat, like in the delivery or in a truck in Las Vegas. They should still dry just fine, right? They would dry on plastic, so why not on an indigo sheet
This might not sound like a big deal, but there are 6500 12x18 sheets, and that's a lot of clicks. Call this homework. Yea or Nay printers?
John Lind
Cranberry Township, PA
724-776-4718