Custom Decals Elevate Your Prototypes

In the life of any company, new product introductions are among the most critical moments. As a result, prototypes are needed if final versions are not available on launch day. Custom decals, the same process increasingly used for museum labels, are an excellent way to add lettering and logos to prototypes. They are a rub-on method that you design yourself and apply in one quick step. When you need to replicate the look of final products, few methods give you the quality and flexibility you have with transfer decals. They are an enduringly popular method because they are easy and economical.

If you haven’t yet designed or applied a custom decal, you’ll be impressed by how easy it is to do. There is no learning curve; you can do it without practicing or learning a new method. It’s as straightforward as aligning the transfer slick with the desired spot and rubbing the decal off and onto the application surface. Another big selling point is the ease of use on any smooth, clean indoor surface. The list includes plastic, wood, metal, glass, and walls. There aren’t many methods that can match the quality. You get air bubbles with vinyl lettering and have visible carrier media with water-slide decals.

Many industrial designers and graphic arts pros are devotees of custom dry transfers. They’ve used them to elevate the look of many projects and finish them on deadline more easily. As soon as you apply a rub-on decal, it’s ready. In other words, there is no drying time or extra adhesive required. They arrive to you from the production house with the right amount of adhesive. It’s surprisingly easy and makes a favorable impression on anyone trying them for the first time. If you show most people a transfer decal on a product prototype, they assume the lettering and logos are painted on the surface.

Given the low cost, you can design and order decals as a test before your next prototyping project. It’s the best way to understand the possibilities. Seeing is believing, and once you’ve applied a decal and scrutinized it in unforgiving light or under a magnifying glass, you’ll understand. As long as the application surface stays dry and is indoors, you can count on your decal staying put. If you need to apply them to a curved object, it’s fine as long as the surface is clean, dry, and smooth. When you have a lot riding on a new product presentation and can’t take chances, use custom decals on your prototypes.

Business Name- Image Transfers

Address- 55 W Railroad Ave #11 Garnerville, NY 10923

Phone- (212)-928-7987

About Author