There's always this baby:

http://www.okidata.com/procolor/pro920wt

Charles Weston

San Antonio

--- On Wed, 5/1/13, Bob Werre <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Bob Werre <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: a tale of 2 Bills and 1 Jerry
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, May 1, 2013, 9:46 AM
















 



  


    
      
      
      

  
  
    Rhett,

    

    That was pretty much my thoughts except that decal printers are
    pretty rare, so with present technology unlikely to be in local
    hobby shops.  However, other hobbies need decals so it's likely a
    major city would have the volume to make such a venture possible.  

    

    The only printer that printed white was common to our hobby was the
    long-gone Alps.  I remember seeing them in local consumer computer
    super stores a few years ago.  One would have to assume that they
    left the market because the normal user didn't need that feature. 
    Hence the need for a larger commercial unit based on volume.  All
    one needs is one of those printers and Bill Lane's 200 hours of
    artwork!

    

    And of course, this brings up the main issue with all these
    semi-defunct companies.  Those pieces of artwork maybe never turn a
    dime for the owners or grace my freight cars!

    

    Bob Werre

    PhotoTraxx

    
       
      
          
            --- In [email protected],
              Bob Werre <bob@...> wrote:

              

              > The solution for all this is for the decal people to
              simply sell "one 

              > time or multiple use rights" to their artwork.

              

              I've often wondered why Microscale wouldn't do something
              like this! How great would it be to go into a hobby shop,
              walk up to a computer, select the sheets (or portions of
              sheets) that you want, hit print and walk out with fresh
              decals?! The price you'd pay would be based on the number
              of artwork sheets you accessed, the print area and the
              number of colors. Microscale could provide the hobby shops
              with the printers and decal sheets, the hobby shop doesn't
              have to inventory the decals (saves space and saves taxes
              on stuff that doesn't sell), and the hobbyist gets fresh
              decals on demand. 

              

              If the artwork were stored in a vector graphics format,
              you could adjust the scale to whatever size fits your
              model. If the vector graphics format were a common one,
              hobbyists could upload their artwork (kind of like
              Shapeways, only for decals) and anyone could have access
              to someone else's artwork. If you didn't have a local
              hobby shop, you could order directly from Microscale in
              this manner too. Since this would apply to all scales and
              the military and car modelers too, it'd be truly amazing
              what could be done! Want those 1:24 auto decals scaled
              down to fit 1:64 autos for a model railroad? Done!

              

              I only use Microscale here because, to my knowledge,
              they're the only model railroad decal manufacturer left.
              Everyone else is a custom decal business. But there's no
              reason one of the custom guys couldn't do the same thing!

              

              Regards,

              Rhett Graves

              

            
          
          
          
          
            
              
                 

                
                

                
                

                
                

                
                

                
              
            
          
        
      
    
    

  



    
     

    
    






  








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