View allAll Photos Tagged logoprint

Promotional Mobile stands/holders. Prices include logo print. A fun promotional gift

 

A closer look at the Titan Valuation logo printed on canvas.

Jen pro vybrané modely flash disků, loga působí 3D dojmem.

Průhledná pryskyřice.

 

více na www.USBpromo.cz

 

I bought this little cutting board from a model train shop recently, and then didn't do the little project for which I bought it. This was a good chance to break it in. Using scissors, I cut out the logo, leaving a little space around the edges for support, and to give room for taping it down.

Design and Printing Vinyl Banner and Table-top Retractable for Cardiff Giant Tattoo.

Here's a bit of a closeup. It's not as crisp and perfect as a screen print, or iron-on, but it's quick, simple, and so far, no one's been able to tell from a normal viewing distance (and even close-up, really) that it's tape. That fact keeps amazing people.

 

What it has over the other methods is that its' temporary. You can add a logo for a single event, and peel it off when you get back home. It's also a lot faster, and cleaner than silk-screening.

I taped the logo down over the two pieces of masking tape. Especially because the logo has tiny, intricate things, I taped all 4 sides down, pulling each out to tighten things up, so the paper wouldn't swim around while I was cutting the details.

It's a bit lower than I was intending, but whatever. I left right after this picture, and was at the theatre taking more pictures one hour later, to the minute, according to the file-creation times on the photos.

 

It does feel a little bit lacking. I think the original text, or at least continuing the radiation circles (which are just circles now) around the empty part of the cog would've helped.

A Canvas Press mom-to-be got creative with canvas in her nursery. The children pictured on canvas are the mom and dad of the bundle of joy.

I layed down 2 pieces of my almost 2" wide masking tape, right on top of each other. The bottom layer is to help peel the whole thing from the board, and the top layer is supposed to be the actual logo that gets applied to the t-shirt.

A zoomed out picture of the nursery reveal the canvases are above the baby's bed.

With the logo cut out, I went through connecting a few cuts that had gaps, and cleaning up some of the curves a bit. Not too much I could do at this point, but I could straighten up some of the arcs a bit.

The logo is applied. Now to remove the parts that aren't part of the logo.

Ta-da! It's important also to note that you should think in terms of your t-shirt's color, and the color of your tape. This is actually a negative of the original logo, but its simplicity meant that it was okay if the gear was light, and the silhouette dark. Think about it if you try this, or any other t-shirt printing technique, or you could end up with a negative of your intended image.

I printed out the small logo, and it did fit nicely in the height of my masking tape, so now I could finish up outside of the computer.

Tweak things in your available paint program. I was on Linux here, and used The Gimp. I set the resolution up to 300dpi, scaled the image to fit the width of my masking tape (1.75" to fit in the not-quite 2" tape), made it greyscale, and leveled things to all black.

To keep everything aligned, I put another piece of masking tape over the tape with all the cuts in it.

The negative parts peeled out nicely.

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