I have a few stickers left ANC just wanted some more done. Local shop said $5 a sticker and all they have to do is duplicate what I give them.
"all they have to do is duplicate" could require 15 minutes or 2 hours depending on how complex the existing decals are and what you have for original files. If it's anything but round or square, keep in mind that not only do you have to digitally draw the graphic/text but you have to setup the cut path...it can be pretty complicated to copy something like that. $5 for a 14" decal isn't bad if you are just ordering onezie twozie. Suppose it takes 30 minutes to draw up the graphic...that's $30 computer time. Then it takes 20 minutes to run it on the printer/plotter and there are significant costs there.
I'm just saying that it's easy to look at a decal and think it should cost less than it does. If you order large quantities, there are huge cost savings because the labor per piece goes way down. For me to just print five 2"x4" decals takes me 16 minutes from opening the file to the point of packaging the items. For me to make 50 of them takes 20 minutes.
About 14" long but I'd like a few longer.
I can always use different sizes but can't justify the $500 start up. I did find a 28" plotter for $200 with software on ebay.
The learning curve can be steep but it's fun stuff. However, I wouldn't recommend going the cheap route - poor machine quality/reliability can make the learning curve extremely frustrating. I have a wide format machine, but my printer/plotter cost over $15k and my laminator $8k.
Going with Jay - someone who does it for fun, is probably a good route.
When I'm doing custom engraved glassware, I tell my customers that the first one produced will be expensive. The second and subsequent copies are dirt cheap by comparison.
The more preparation work that the customer can do, the less that first one will cost.
What are you using for your graphics work? For the LASER engraver/cutter/marker systems that I use, CorelDRAW seems to be the industry standard.
We use both Adobe Illustrator and CorelDraw. Much of our business is industrial safety graphics and the way Corel handles sheet tabs within the same file is handy to keep the customer's supplied graphic information, design elements, and the production file in one package. Illustrator doesn't do that very well so we only use Illustrator when we have to (and man I hate paying the $ to upgrade that software that I use once every two weeks).