A Distributor Asks: My client ordered totes and is not happy with the color of the logo. The logo imprint method was silkscreen, and we paid for PMS matching. The color of the proof looked perfect, and I will admit the color on the tote is slightly lighter/more neon. It is not way off, and personally, if I were the client, I wouldn’t have had an issue. However, it is slightly off.
Should I respond to the client and say that color varies slightly due to the material in which it is printed or take this up with the supplier?
What is considered the industry norm in terms of color variation allowance, particularly if you paid for a PMS match? How would you respond to this client?
RAMA BEERFAS, MAS, CTSM
Owner
Lev Promotions
Santee, California
PPAI 218331, D1
ERIC LEVIN
Executive Vice President
alphabroder
New York, New York
PPAI 781237, S12
JULIE WOODALL
Account Executive
HALO
Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin
PPAI 716629, D1
A Distributor Asks: There seems to be a major disconnect with most graphic designers when it comes to apparel and branded merchandise. Some of our clients have rebranded recently, and now they’re having to come to terms with the fact that their new logo and style guide will not work for many of the branded products they’d like to purchase due to line size, number of colors in the logo, inability to get a good one-color version, etc.
I’m wondering how any of you are handling aspects of design like this. I know you larger firms out there are creative agencies as well. For those that aren’t, are there graphic design firms who specialize in branding from an apparel/product/engraving standpoint as well?
MARIA RUDNEV
President
Pro-File Marketing
Las Vegas, Nevada
PPAI 439909, D1
GLORIA LAFONT
Owner
Action Marketing
Plantation, Florida
PPAI 656637, D1
A Distributor Asks: I got a new customer, and she orders 30 zipper hoodies for her son’s bar mitzvah. There’s a DTF on the left chest and full back. I cut the price to do her a favor, as she was a referral from my designer. The order was printed six weeks before the party. She never opened the box until the party. Some of the shirts had the left chest printed upside down! It was a very weird combination of the initials, so I can see how it could happen.
She tells me 12 are wrong, but seven of those 12 are with people who live out of state, so she doesn’t want them reprinted, she wants her money back – all of her money back.
I explained to her that we do not refund money for orders that were, first, placed almost two months ago and, second, we offered to reprint all of the ones that were bad. Along with the reprint, we would offer her a credit of $105. She still wants her money back. Now, she’s taken to social media and thinks that she should get the money back for the whole order and a reprint of all the shirts.
RYAN FEIGNENBLATT
President
The Boca Ratonian
Boca Raton, Florida
PPAI 586034, D1
KATHRYN MCDONALD
CEO
The Global Toy Box
Cardiff By The Sea, California
PPAI 637758, D1