Coffee Mugs
Posted: Thu Sep 05, 2024 7:15 am
So I've been playing around with a Cricut machine. Essentially a desktop CNC sheet vinyl cutter. You can cut out whatever design you like onto various types sticker or sublimation ink and stick it on whatever you like. T-Shirts, cars, etc.
One use is to print out a vinyl mask/stencil and then stick that on something metallic, and use either ferric chloride or a sandblaster to permanently etch into the metal. It's a pretty impressive result, old-fashioned brass plaques/clock faces/gauge faces and such. And modern stainless steel tumblers that have a laser-etched appearance.
BUT THE POINT IS that I'm thinking about trying a new technique, wherein you cut your image out of sublimation ink sheets and heat fuse them onto a white ceramic coffee mug. Like so: So I'd like to create one or more reproduction Case or Ingersoll promotional mugs. In my mind I'd do three of them: An early 400 series tractor, a 3000 series, and a 600 series. Obviously there are too many permutations to do every machine ever, and I don't want to "be in the mug business." But I thought it would be nice to have at least 2 or 3 representative/iconic mugs to choose from. I know I'd certainly like to have one. I'd sell and ship them for more-or less cost. The ink sheets will be 10 or $15 total, and the mugs are a dozen for $30. So something like $5 or 6 plus shipping. Not free, but not exorbitant. Hopefully around $15 total shipped. Not that I have the foggiest idea what shipping WAY up yonder to the northern territories is costing these days. :-)
For my personal tastes, having owned an early 442, and now a 4020, the 400 series mug would be perfect for me.
Here's the hard part: I figure an actual Case or Ingersoll logo on one side of the mug, and a 3/4 view of the tractor on the other. The logos I have in hand.
But what are the iconic images, and where can I find them? A pre-made line drawing is ideal, something that already comes from printed advertising material. But a good quality, well-lit photo of the target tractor would work too.
Anybody got or can point me to such pictures? Do we want to vote on what three mugs to make, with which photos?
Or any other better ideas in general?
Bob
One use is to print out a vinyl mask/stencil and then stick that on something metallic, and use either ferric chloride or a sandblaster to permanently etch into the metal. It's a pretty impressive result, old-fashioned brass plaques/clock faces/gauge faces and such. And modern stainless steel tumblers that have a laser-etched appearance.
BUT THE POINT IS that I'm thinking about trying a new technique, wherein you cut your image out of sublimation ink sheets and heat fuse them onto a white ceramic coffee mug. Like so: So I'd like to create one or more reproduction Case or Ingersoll promotional mugs. In my mind I'd do three of them: An early 400 series tractor, a 3000 series, and a 600 series. Obviously there are too many permutations to do every machine ever, and I don't want to "be in the mug business." But I thought it would be nice to have at least 2 or 3 representative/iconic mugs to choose from. I know I'd certainly like to have one. I'd sell and ship them for more-or less cost. The ink sheets will be 10 or $15 total, and the mugs are a dozen for $30. So something like $5 or 6 plus shipping. Not free, but not exorbitant. Hopefully around $15 total shipped. Not that I have the foggiest idea what shipping WAY up yonder to the northern territories is costing these days. :-)
For my personal tastes, having owned an early 442, and now a 4020, the 400 series mug would be perfect for me.
Here's the hard part: I figure an actual Case or Ingersoll logo on one side of the mug, and a 3/4 view of the tractor on the other. The logos I have in hand.
But what are the iconic images, and where can I find them? A pre-made line drawing is ideal, something that already comes from printed advertising material. But a good quality, well-lit photo of the target tractor would work too.
Anybody got or can point me to such pictures? Do we want to vote on what three mugs to make, with which photos?
Or any other better ideas in general?
Bob