Neko, I appreciate the details of the printing options however, when I found your video, I actually expected a video on start to finish. I would have liked to have seen how much inventory to buy to begin with. So I'd be looking for: if you were to buy hoodies, t-shirts, shorts, muscle shirts, how many of each size and color would you initially purchase. It is easy to watch a video on the machines but there are no videos that actually give an estimate of how much clothing inventory to start with.
@@monaspence876 that will really depend on what you're looking to do in your business. I personally purchase only when I get an order. I'll keep maybe 5 or 6 of small to XL on hand of regular ts, white and black. I made the mistake of buying too much inventory when I started, and I got left with tons of tanks that I have to this day. But then again, if you have a customer base that loves tanks, then it might be worth you keeping a few in stock. But to start, keep it simple and don't over spend. 3 or 4 on hand small to XXL I'm black and white. And only order specialty garments like tanks or crop tops on demand. Hoodies can be seasonal, but I also order those on demand
Hey, I watch your videos, I learn a lot. I like it very much. I think if this video was well edited like the previous videos, we would have liked it better. Anyway, thank you very much for the nice videos
Thanks for the feedback! Unfortunately a video editor can get very expensive and much don't know about the business, so adding in the clips of the tools and everything would have been a long and expensive edit. So sometimes I have to do it myself. I hope you found the video informational and thank you for watching 🙂
Do you have tutorials on pressing on dark fabrics (cotton and poly and blends)? I'm using a sub printer/ink/paper and just started using the HTV substrate but my attempts still fail with poor quality. I also don't own any precision cutting machine so I'm left with the white background from the transfer vinyl as a background; something I don't want. Just started a week ago with all of this. Light/white fabrics are fine! Also tried with DTF/powder on cotton/poly and these fail with the colors disappearing once pressed. Still searching for answers here and other sources. Appreciate any help! Thanks!
I just saw you point to the other video on sublimation. I'll check out. If my dark fabric prints still don't work I'm asking questions in that vid! Lol.
lol! The thing with sublimation is that for best results, you need white 100% polyester. I don't like sublimating on htv, it never comes out right for me and truthfully it never really lasts either. Unless you use Siser EasySubli. That one I have heard good things about
@@NekoPrints But the at-home options will cost me too much, currently. I think I can get something successful going with HTV, but my issue is the precision cutting around designs. I don't have a tool for this so I end up with white borders from the transfer paper around my design. But I can practice with this approach and I'll learn some things anyway. So, what about outsourcing transfers for successful dark attempts? They seem to last and look good at least for a few months after customers have purchased. Lol. Thanks!
Neko, I appreciate the details of the printing options however, when I found your video, I actually expected a video on start to finish. I would have liked to have seen how much inventory to buy to begin with. So I'd be looking for: if you were to buy hoodies, t-shirts, shorts, muscle shirts, how many of each size and color would you initially purchase. It is easy to watch a video on the machines but there are no videos that actually give an estimate of how much clothing inventory to start with.
@@monaspence876 that will really depend on what you're looking to do in your business. I personally purchase only when I get an order. I'll keep maybe 5 or 6 of small to XL on hand of regular ts, white and black. I made the mistake of buying too much inventory when I started, and I got left with tons of tanks that I have to this day. But then again, if you have a customer base that loves tanks, then it might be worth you keeping a few in stock. But to start, keep it simple and don't over spend. 3 or 4 on hand small to XXL I'm black and white. And only order specialty garments like tanks or crop tops on demand. Hoodies can be seasonal, but I also order those on demand
Hey, I watch your videos, I learn a lot. I like it very much. I think if this video was well edited like the previous videos, we would have liked it better. Anyway, thank you very much for the nice videos
Thanks for the feedback! Unfortunately a video editor can get very expensive and much don't know about the business, so adding in the clips of the tools and everything would have been a long and expensive edit. So sometimes I have to do it myself. I hope you found the video informational and thank you for watching 🙂
Thank you.
Thank you for watching! I hope you found it helpful :)
@@NekoPrints You’re welcome. Yes I did.
Your videos are amazing. I really like it. I am a new subscriber to your channel. Can I talk with you Neko?
Do you have tutorials on pressing on dark fabrics (cotton and poly and blends)? I'm using a sub printer/ink/paper and just started using the HTV substrate but my attempts still fail with poor quality. I also don't own any precision cutting machine so I'm left with the white background from the transfer vinyl as a background; something I don't want. Just started a week ago with all of this. Light/white fabrics are fine! Also tried with DTF/powder on cotton/poly and these fail with the colors disappearing once pressed. Still searching for answers here and other sources. Appreciate any help! Thanks!
I just saw you point to the other video on sublimation. I'll check out. If my dark fabric prints still don't work I'm asking questions in that vid! Lol.
lol! The thing with sublimation is that for best results, you need white 100% polyester. I don't like sublimating on htv, it never comes out right for me and truthfully it never really lasts either. Unless you use Siser EasySubli. That one I have heard good things about
@@NekoPrints But the at-home options will cost me too much, currently. I think I can get something successful going with HTV, but my issue is the precision cutting around designs. I don't have a tool for this so I end up with white borders from the transfer paper around my design. But I can practice with this approach and I'll learn some things anyway. So, what about outsourcing transfers for successful dark attempts? They seem to last and look good at least for a few months after customers have purchased. Lol. Thanks!
THANK YOU SO MUCH ..
You're welcome! Glad you found it helpful :)