Select the colour and t-shirt colour is one of the fun parts of the design, but it can be a little too tricky. Sometimes certain t-shirt/ink colour combinations look more vibrant on a computer screen than in real life. It depends on the lighting in the Lab is optimal (no shadows or low light) and computer monitors often have filters for vivid colours. Although this filter makes your everyday computing visually exciting, it makes the colours you see in lab. Change Our art team is very aware of this problem and every order that comes through Custom Ink checked for colour contrast. If we. Spot a potential contrast problems that we think you may end up not satisfied, we will contact you to discuss it, but also as evidence of a different colour Here are some quick guidelines for colour combinations that pop is to choose! When using lighter, be careful with pastel colours like yellow, light blue or pink. These colours are visible on shirts, but can not be read remotely. A review of a darker colour to a lighter colour design can highlight them so that it reads the text Darker coloured shirts look good with the brighter colours of ink, but be careful with dark colours like cardinal, maroon or forest green. These colours look great in the lab, but sometimes when they print t-shirt colour on colour ink distorted, so that it was more brown or dull, as intended. When we see these colours in one order, we will call and offer a colour similar to the colour you selected in the lab out.
Light grey
Boot cut black jeans