That's cool. It's like a personal thing that you have been developing over years. Cool of you to share.
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...DGR were both still alive... its been that long!...
Stop it, y'all are making me nostalgic....I look at the stamp all the time and remember when DGR was a thing.
Stop it, y'all are making me nostalgic.
I still rock the Marm-art shirt we had printed up years ago. Makes me smile to see the discs and shirts floating around at local events.
Welcome back friend, solid marker skills.
after seeing the warthog, first thing i thought was why DTP doesn't do this more instead of the arduous process of painting with dye. perhaps the limited palette of sharpies...
after seeing the warthog, first thing i thought was why DTP doesn't do this more instead of the arduous process of painting with dye. perhaps the limited palette of sharpies...
proof:
DX Aviar from 1999-ish, Sharpie applied shortly after I got it
hundreds of rounds later
Nice job, Marmoset
Curious, have you experimented with colored Sharpie and does it last as long?
My sharpie work from 15 years ago still looks fantastic, no bleed.
I think the only real advantages with painting vs. sharpies are the virtually infinite color choices and the ability to create smooth shading gradients.
Is this true for premium plastic as well? I feel like my name and number on my discs fuzzes and fades very similarly to dye.
I am guessing that ink, unlike dye, actually holds up better on DX than other plastic because DX does not dye very well. Where premium plastic will tend to absorb the ink deep into the plastic over time (and fuzz and fade a bit as it does), the ink on DX stays put closer to the surface. Pure speculation but it makes sense to me.