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- Screen Printing: The standard method for T-shirt printing. This is where we make a different screen for each color of your design and lay each color down on the shirt one at a time. This is the standard method used on the majority of printed T-shirts out there. The design will have long lasting durability and color and can be placed anywhere on the shirt or garment. The drawback is that we can only do 6 colors per design. Typically this is more than enough for most designs. Note that often we can "create" new colors by using what are called "half tones". These are small dots of color laid down in various sizes and spacing over other colors to make a whole new color. (i.e. blue dots are placed over a yellow space - creating a green area).
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- Special Effects: We can do a variety of special effects, including foil, metallic inks, glitter, glow-in-the-dark, flocking and tons more. Check out our of some of our techniques list here.
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- Digital Printing: We now offer direct-to-garment digital printing. This is a fairly new and exciting technique that has gone through a lot of advancements over the years. We feel that it is finally at a quality level that we are comfortable enough in offering it to our customers. The process is similar in how your desktop inkjet printer works. The shirt is placed into the printer and a print head goes over the shirt, laying the colors down as it passes. The quality of the inks used are very advanced, bright and durable. The minimum for this option is 24 shirts, but the color count in your design is unlimited. Go here for more information.
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- Sample Shirts: If you need a screen printed sample shirt, we can do it for you for a fee of $100 per design color + the cost of the shirt. This is due to the time consuming task of creating screens and setting them up for print. A better, less expensive option may be ordering 24 shirts (our minimum) or getting a one-off transfer shirt.
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- Names & Numbers: Need names &/or numbers for the back of your team shirts? We can do that.
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- Embroidery: Your logo is actually stitched onto your garment with different colors of thread by an advanced computer guided machine. Small details, obviously, aren't as sharp as printed, but the technique does give a nice quality to your item. Because of the "heaviness" of the embroidered area - this method works best on "polo" type shirts or hats.
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