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Anyone knows of online store to print black tees?
I tried Cafepress but they don't print spaghetti t-shirts and camisoles in black. Only in white. Bummer!
I tried Spreadshirt but somehow, they always reject my logo because they say the quality wouldn't be good. Bummer again! The logo that I have is in PNG format and you may have a look here: http://www.exquisiteangelz.com/logo.png. So, any recommendations? |
four oh four
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Image properties on your header.png is saying it's only 71dpi so they are right about low quality. When I looked at t-shirt printing a while ago as someone wanted their logo re-doing for t-shirts the printers were asking for 300dpi as a raster image.
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jakprints.com
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I have use dthis comapny for Black t-shirts and other colors, they have tons of styles they print on, you may need to call them though.
http://kaleidoscopeimprints.com/kscope.html kaleidoscopeimprints {dot} com/kscope.html |
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http://img532.imageshack.us/img532/471/36198432.png
thats your image pasted into a 300dpi page and then saved and spreadshirt.com bounced to spreadshirt.co.uk for me and the t-shirt builder thing seemed to accept it. ideally though printers seem to prefer vector images that can be resized with no quality loss with anything like this though if you find someone that says they can do it make sure you get a proof done before you go ahead and order 500 or you could end up with 500 unuseable rags. |
Try Zazzle
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they say 150dpi for clothing Quote:
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I found the pixels per inch as well but I think that may be what you're looking for... set it at 300 and you should be good...
someone correct me iif I am wrong please/. |
The original image needs to be at least 200 dpi, some say 300 but I've found 200 works just as well for apparel printing.
The original image needs to be created at the 200 or 300 dpi level..you can't just take a 72 dpi image and "add" dpi to it. You have to consider the actual size of the art..if its a typical website header image size it will print out at what might be a very tiny 2 inch by 6 inch image. As was said above you really want a logo to be created in vector format so you CAN enlarge or reduce the image w/o any loss in quality. Whatever vendor you finally use I would strongly suggest ordering a sample so you can check the final image quality, your logo has a glow around the halo and the detail in the wings that may be difficult to reproduce as designed. You may also want to adjust colors, such as the blue outline on the text so it pops out better against a black background. Remember that the color you see on the screen most likely will not be the same tone when printed. You also have white against a black edge that sometimes creates an issue when printing white on black apparel, depending on the printing methods. |
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...next open the cartoon and copy that image to the new image project ...next add a new text layer with the information about your site and style it as you desire ...when complete..save the image in whatever format the printer specifies in their requirements. it might be a .PSD, .EPS, .JPEG, .PNG (it will automatically save at 300 dpi unless you alter the settings) upload that image to the printer. |
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http://i40.tinypic.com/34qpoop.jpg |
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Bump for help & answer.
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