India
is a 25.56 year old girl, has been a member since May 25, 2005, has scored 900 submissions, giving an average score of 1.66, helping 3 designs get printed.
Threadless gives you the options of 4 colors and an underbase white (which is necessary for colors to be bright on dark shirts). So they actually print 5 colors. In the case of John2's mermaid design, the shirt doesn't need an underbase due to its light color in nature. I guess they decided to go with the 5 no mattter what.
Hey, I'm not saying to throw an extra color in your design and put it on a white t-shirt. hahaha But I am trying to educated the artists on the site about some of the screen processes it takes to get their designs onto shirts. one tip at a time.
I'm still planning on buying stuff from you. I just need to figure out PayPal crap, first, because I haven't used PayPal in a year and I forget my password and stuff. :)
Dudes, what the hell... I'm so confused about how you're seeing that green as the dark grey, especially since the dark green touches the dark grey and is completely different. So it couldn't even be some kind of optical trick caused by contrasting the grey against different colours. It friggin' touches.
?!?
I know that they have printed shirts with five colours before, so it's not that big of a deal, I'm just completely thrown off by the fact that some of you are convinced that the green is dark grey. :/
Ok, after copying the pic and bringing into illustrator and zooming in.... there are two greens used for the money. That would make this a 5 color design. Unless.... the printer used a 50% transparency using the darker grey to simulate the shadow.
Thanks for the offer, but I'm pretty much just having trouble getting into the e-mail that I used to set it up with. That problem should be fixed by tomorrow at the latest, though. :)
I think what looks like dark green is actually the light grey color again. Becuase it is soo tiny and right next to the green i think were getting the illusion that it is green.