I’ve been driving around with six commercial kitchen shelves and the uprights for about a month now, hoping to get a minion to help unload said shelving components from my car and put the shelving together.
Today the stars aligned, and i was gifted the services of the multi-talented @NickWebb to accomplish this task. Old people like me definitely benefit from the presence of young whippersnappers to supervise. I’ve gotta get some more of the shelf support doodads to install the top shelf, but we got ‘er done.
We also moved the cubbie that was in the sewing room into the digital output room and I put all the vinyl rolls in that.
A friend came over to contemplate the organization/reorganization of many plastic notion containers. I will finally get to play with my new P-touch printer. Woohoo!
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This looks fantastic! You guys did a great job!
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The Vinyl cubby looks SO much better. Thank you!
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It worked out even better than I had hoped. The cubbies were exactly the same depth as the more standard rolls of vinyl. Putting the butcher paper dispenser in the top space was an afterthought. My friend Chris was squinting at the information stuck to the wall above, and I realized that the paper thing blocked the view of the actual pricing.
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Have you solved the problem of clearly visually delineating the heat-transfer vinyl from the other vinyls?
I don’t actually KNOW the difference myself. Yet.
But I have been thinking about that. I’m kind of thinking that some sort of color coding inside the cardboard tube might be an easy to spy clue. Although it wouldn’t help with scrap id. And since people are apparently incapable of putting scraps away in a neat/tidy manner, fat chance they would take the time to put into a use-specific scrap bin…
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So the EASIEST way to tell the difference is that regular vinyl has backing paper on it, usually white. HTV is also typically thinner feeling than regular vinyl.
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