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Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 23 Sep 2012, 22:53
by Greybeard
Greetings from North Norfolk, currently pretty wet and windy.
I've been aware of dye sub as a process for many years, but I'm now looking at dipping the proverbial "toe in the water".
Might even come out of retirement :biggrin:

John

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 23 Sep 2012, 23:03
by Justin
Hi John and welcome to the world of Sublimation! oh, and the forum of course :-)

Justin
DSF Admin

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 23 Sep 2012, 23:47
by WorthDoingRight
Greybeard;54333 wrote:I'm now looking at dipping the proverbial "toe in the water"
Welcome John, a toe in the water makes a change from dipping the hot dye sublimated mug in the water lol

Richard

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 07:10
by Craig
welcome to DSF

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 07:20
by Charlie_
Good morning from a wet and wild North Essex Coast John.

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 09:16
by socialgiraffe
Welcome to the forum John. Weather.... (yes it is deliberately spelt wrong!!!) you have been in the industry for years or just starting out this foum is superb and I hope you get as much information and enjoyment out of it as I do.

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 10:44
by bigj2552
Welcome John.......enjoy this forum. it is a wealth of info for the sub dye business.

grab a 15oz mug of your fav brew, and look around..

johnny

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 19:05
by bms
Greybeard;54333 wrote: Might even come out of retirement :biggrin:
Welcome John :) Careful ! :)

Re: Hi, from stormy Norfolk.

Posted: 24 Sep 2012, 20:23
by Greybeard
Time I said thank you for all the welcomes.
I seem to have spent most of the day trying to read up on recent postings, but seem to have got detoured into DTG somehow. Probably that jaw dropping flaming guitar that did it.
Now if it had been a hammer dulcimer....:biggrin:

Lots of questions are bubbling up, so it's off to the "Misc. printing" to start climbing the learning curve.
Regards to all,
John