
Quality of the finished product
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As I said in the previous post, I went back to my screen printing. Yes, it's much more satisfying, but today I went a little too far. I printed 7 colors on a 4-color manual carousel.
It seems impossible, I know, but after many adjustments I managed to get a horrible CMYK in halftones (halftone?) on some frames developed a few days ago for white t-shirts. This time I attacked a black t-shirt directly, just to measure my strength with myself.
I said it was a horrible CMYK even though I took pictures of it and bragged about it wherever I could. But at the end of the day I thought I'd put it next to the picture of the HTV print from two days ago. The image definition is so different between the two technologies, you almost can't believe it. If I had halftones of 38 DPI for screen printing, the printer printed on the HTV without any problems at exactly the resolution of the print, no halftones (semitones?!) no nothing.
Some images below to delight.
In the end, does it really matter what I like or what someone else likes? What matters at the end of the day is selling a high-quality finished product. Because that's what we all want when we go out to buy a vacuum cleaner, right?