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Make Your Own Decals! - Anyone done this before?

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 29, 2005 9:54 PM
Ryan,

Apologies for not replying sooner, didn't realise there were 2 pages to this thread.

Decal was flat on the workbench.

By thoroughly dry I mean I ran the hair dryer for 5 minutes on low setting - duration was one minute on, one minute off, one minute on, one minute off, one minute on. Hair dryer was about 200mm (8 inches) from decal.

I then left decal for about an hour. Don't know whether this is overkill but it worked.

regards

John L
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Posted by dragenrider on Monday, January 31, 2005 4:57 PM
Let me chime in on the decals. I print my own decals using an HP ink jet printer. What I do is let them dry overnight and then give them several coats of of Testers Dull Cote, allowing them to dry well in between each coat. This seals in the ink and I can dunk and stick without the letters running.

The only problem I've encountered is with an occasional letter run during spraying the entire engine after the decals have been applied. I attribute this to not sealing the letters good in the first place.

It can be done! I hope this helps. There's an example below my name.

The Cedar Branch & Western--The Hillbilly Line!

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Posted by SilverSpike on Monday, January 31, 2005 6:28 PM
John L,
Hey, no problem, thanks for the reply! I appreciate the follow-up refgarding the drying process, the hair dryer technique will surely speed things up!

Dragenrider,
Thanks for the tip with the Dull Cote applications, which makes perfect sense since you are only wetting the decal to remove it from the backing it should not affect the ink. I will have to try that one out too. Thanks also for posting the image, good job there! I checked out your images on the Railimages site, great layout.

BTW: How did you get the 'Cedar Branch & Western' decal printed with white ink on that Caboose No. 10 on spur track?

Thanks

Ryan

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

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Posted by jhugart on Thursday, February 10, 2005 2:44 PM
A couple of thoughts...

First, on resolution. Ink-jet printers these days can print in very high resolutions, because the market demands photographic-quality prints. The limit of resolution then becomes the software you use, not the printer.

If you don't know, resolution refers to the number of pixture elements (pixels) - the squares of color - that you can fit into a given space. Usually, this is measured as dots-per-inch, or dpi. If you imagine a sheet of 1/4" rule graph paper, and you colored in the squares entirely, that would be 4 dpi. Twenty years ago, laser printers were commonly 300 dpi. Today, even cheap ink-jets handle 1000 dpi or more.

The reason why the high resolution is required is because of the color. Inks are not dyes. In order to get a given color in a given space, you have to combine inks to create the appearance of the color. Most ink-jet printers handle the four process colors: Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, and blacK (hence CMYK). If you want something that looks green, the printer puts some yellow and some cyan in that area, but the dots are so small that your eyes perceives them as green. Take a magnifying lens to a color photograph in a newspaper to see how different dots combine to show areas of color.

A dye sublimation printer layers dyes that combine to produce exactly the color desired, there's no optical effect involved. This means that one dot or pixel in a dye-sub printer can represent the color you want, whereas it might take many more pixels with an ink-jet printer to achieve the same effect.

Anyway, regarding software: If you use Photoshop, it is a raster program. That is, it stores pixels and works with pixels. It paints, it doesn't draw. So you have to use a dpi in Photoshop to match the dpi you want on the output device.

Vector programs, like Adobe Illustrator, store shapes as mathematical descriptions. The printer driver converts this information to the rasters needed to render the image. If you could develop your logo in Illustrator or some other drawing program, then it would print at the maximum resolution of the printer, and the file on disk will be smaller, too.

As already noted, ink-jets are great at transparencies -- that's what the market wants. People still print on transparency film. The ALPS printers printed opaque colors, so you could have white on clear. I don't think there's a printer made today for consumers that has this feature. Maybe some service bureaus could handle printing opaque colors to decal paper. You could call around and ask if they can produce decals you can apply at home using water, and what resolutions it would require.

Another thought: Scrapbooking is a popular thing these days, with places like Archivers having huge amounts of stickers, stamps, and such. They sell pens in opaque colors. Perhaps it is possible to get a rubber stamp of custom artwork, such as a road name, and use it with paint or an ink pad? Next time I'm at Archiver's I'll ask about this. Microscopic lettering is probably not something they would sell in any form, though.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, February 10, 2005 4:26 PM
EVen after taking all the care you can, it seems that using color ink jet printers for decals is kind of hit-and-miss. From my professional experience with these printers I'm not surprised. Another potential issue is longevitiy: most ink jet print fades rapidly in strong light and if you use unshielded fluorescents they emit a lot of UV. Not sure that the Epson oil-based inks offer a significant improvement in handling but they were designed to retain a quality image longer.

Having said all that, I've had excellent results with laser printers. You just need to find a shop that will let you run the decal paper through one of their copiers - not all will, but its not too tough.

Jacob makes an excellent point on raster versus vector. I use Coreldraw with great success and its cheaper than Photoshop.
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Posted by BRVRR on Thursday, February 10, 2005 10:07 PM
Ryan,
I used the Testor's kit to make the heralds for my BRVRR engine. I made a whole sheet so some of them will eventually turn up on 'house' rolling stock.
I printed the images and let the ink dry overnight. Then sprayed them lightly with the 'setting spray' that comes in the kit.
I had no problems with applying it to the nose of my F7. Solvaset didn't seem to hurt it, but I used it sparingly. After everything was dry I over coated it with Dullcoat.
Alas, my lettering is still individual letters and numbers from Microscale.
Here's a picture:

More on the website.

Remember its your railroad

Allan

  Track to the BRVRR Website:  http://www.brvrr.com/

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Posted by cmrproducts on Friday, February 11, 2005 5:26 AM
From the sounds of these posts making decals with an ink jet (water based inks) is not very productive.

Well every week I get a new batch of decals as I do not produce them myself but one of my regular operators on my layout does them.

And there seems to be no end to what can be done. I had a special logo made for the side of an Atlas CVR Hopper. We slapped the decal right on the gray undec. body and it looked good. But I wanted the logo to cover the whole body so I ask our decal maker if he could make it 5 inches wide and 1 inch tall. Last night it showed up just as I ask.

So I think that we have the system down pretty good and again it is using an Epson printer with the oil based ink system.

If you are serious about making one off decals then consider the Epson (and I am in no way an Epson user, I use a Cannon printer) but then I am not the one doing the decal printing!

BOB H Clarion, PA
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Posted by SilverSpike on Friday, February 11, 2005 9:17 AM
QUOTE: jhugart

Today, even cheap ink-jets handle 1000 dpi or more.


Jacob,
Great explanation you gave of the raster and vector image rendering aspects. I have a Canon photo printer that has a dpi resolution of up to 4,800 X 2,400. I have printed photo quality images on photo paper and I cannot tell the difference between them and the ones from the photo lab. I have not tested the decal paper on it yet, still working on the creating images and lettering stage.

QUOTE: BRVRR

Alas, my lettering is still individual letters and numbers from Microscale.
Here's a picture:


Allan,
Thanks for the great photo, and I like the decal work.



Ryan

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 9:42 AM
After reading about making decals I have a couple guestions. I have a alps md-1300 printer. Will this work okay. Also when you make your decals how do you get your letters small enough. My letters only go down to 6.
Paul
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 6:18 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Johnston

My letters only go down to 6.


What program are you using? Most will let you get down at 1. I know Word, for example, will let you do anything between 1 and 1638 including fractions (I use 11.5 on papers for school all the time).
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 7:03 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by smyers

Ooops;
Spraying my test shots with clear Krylon acrylic enamel, as recommended by one decal paper vendor, caused many letters to bleed and run, and had the same effect as spraying weathering chalk with a clear overcoat. The colors "thinned", becoming even more translucent, even solid black.

Oh well, back to square one.

Best,
smyers

ok always always test that spray on clear coat on a nother thing that has the same ink (if you are like me and just do it with most things even though the lble clearly states to thes it)
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 13, 2005 12:36 PM
Thanks, I am using word and found out how to get smaller letters
Paul
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 26, 2005 7:37 AM
i have a canon and i really whant to get to the point
1. where do i get the decal paper and how much
2. were do i get the solvaset and any others (tell me if there is any better or cheaper than solvaset)
3. will my printer work
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Posted by SilverSpike on Monday, March 14, 2005 1:55 PM
ben610,
Answers to your questions:
1. Micro-Mark sells decal paper. (http://www.micromark.com)
Also, Walthers (http://www.walters.com) has various decal paper available, Evans Designs, Vitachrome Graphics. Price depends on quantity and brand, I see a $$ range from $15.95 for a pack of 5 sheets and up to $350.00 for a pack of 100 sheets.
2. Walthers has Solvaset - 2 oz bottle is $2.49
3. What kind of printer are you going to use? I see Canon, but what model, inkjet, laserjet?

Ryan

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: Ozark Mountains
  • 1,167 posts
Posted by dragenrider on Monday, March 14, 2005 9:05 PM
QUOTE: BTW: How did you get the 'Cedar Branch & Western' decal printed with white ink on that Caboose No. 10 on spur track?




Silver Spike, the white letters were professionally produced by a private decal maker. I highly recommend him! He's honest, fast, and his prices beat everyone else. ACURI@aol.com is his email address, durned if I can remember his name. I'm not sure if he's still in business. I hope he is, I'm going to need more soon! [tup]

The Cedar Branch & Western--The Hillbilly Line!

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