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#1
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plant label printing
Has anyone tried using those new Dymo or Brother labellers? Some I know
are on laminated or paper tape but I am sure there are some tapes that are plastic. I recently saw a labelled plant with that type of label stuck onto a normal white label and it looked really quite legible and professional. Has anyone got a labelling machine that can do plastic labels that will withstand outdoor use? janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#2
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plant label printing
"Janet Tweedy" wrote Has anyone tried using those new Dymo or Brother labellers? Some I know are on laminated or paper tape but I am sure there are some tapes that are plastic. I recently saw a labelled plant with that type of label stuck onto a normal white label and it looked really quite legible and professional. Has anyone got a labelling machine that can do plastic labels that will withstand outdoor use? We use the "old fashioned" dymo tape ( the embossed type) stuck onto large plastic labels to label our allotment. Lasts years. -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#3
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plant label printing
Janet Tweedy wrote:
Has anyone got a labelling machine that can do plastic labels that will withstand outdoor use? There are two types. some hotfoil the print onto the outside of the plastic substrate, others transfer it to the middle of a clear-print-background sandwich. I have used the second type, a Dymo 4500, to label subsea equipment towed through the ocean at up to 6 knots. If it can survive that it can survive anything. That said, the only really indestructable labels appear to be embossed metal. I have used stainless and aluminium strip - the stainless has sharp edges. |
#4
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plant label printing
Janet,
I have been using a Brother machine with produces a laminated adhesive tape. I have stuck this onto 4" plastic labels and the text remains perfectly ledgible. The main issue is the spapping of the plastic label itself. However seems to keep hold if directly affixed to the plant pot itself Clifford Bawtry, Doncaster, South Yorkshire |
#5
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plant label printing
In article , Bob Hobden
writes We use the "old fashioned" dymo tape ( the embossed type) stuck onto large plastic labels to label our allotment. Lasts years. I wondered if the new printers might be better. I have am old Dymo wotsit but some letters don't always come out as clear unless you press REALLY hard. Janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#6
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plant label printing
The message .com
from "cliff_the_gardener" contains these words: Janet, I have been using a Brother machine with produces a laminated adhesive tape. I have stuck this onto 4" plastic labels and the text remains perfectly ledgible. The main issue is the spapping of the plastic label itself. However seems to keep hold if directly affixed to the plant pot itself Clifford Bawtry, Doncaster, South Yorkshire I too have one of these Brother labellers and the tape does last very well. There are a couple of slight disadvantages. Firstly it is slower than you might think to cut the tape, peel off the backing and stick them on and secondly it wastes quite a lot of the tape which is in fact rather expensive. Janet G |
#7
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plant label printing
spapping
Is this a technical term or another Super Pointless Annoying Post |
#8
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plant label printing
"Janet Tweedy" wrote after Bob Hobden waffled on We use the "old fashioned" dymo tape ( the embossed type) stuck onto large plastic labels to label our allotment. Lasts years. I wondered if the new printers might be better. I have am old Dymo wotsit but some letters don't always come out as clear unless you press REALLY hard. Yes, the "old" type do wear out quickly IME. We have looked at the new label printers, Dymo, Brother etc and just don't know if their labels work as well/last as long. They are rather expensive to buy just to see. We stick them on the 10 inch plastic labels you can get mail order. -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#9
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plant label printing
In article , Bob Hobden
writes Yes, the "old" type do wear out quickly IME. We have looked at the new label printers, Dymo, Brother etc and just don't know if their labels work as well/last as long. They are rather expensive to buy just to see. We stick them on the 10 inch plastic labels you can get mail order. Oh good idea. I have seeds that have now got "brown bag, sown august 2006 looks interesting" on the label as the name wore off I do give away a lot of cuttings and if people can't read the names properly it does get interesting. Thanks Bob and everyone else. Janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#10
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plant label printing
In article , Janet Galpin
writes There are a couple of slight disadvantages. Firstly it is slower than you might think to cut the tape, peel off the backing and stick them on and secondly it wastes quite a lot of the tape which is in fact rather expensive. Janet G That's that I thought janet. Must look for the other types to compare. -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
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