Using a manual (crank) die cutting machine, we take printed sheets and in one pass both cut out the box outline and put in the creases for folding. These boxes are for The Melty Misfits stickers, designed by Buff Monster.
I have a diecut machine with a 9” bed for cutting. I think it would be big enough to cut that box. You print the box than use this die. Where did you get the die?
I'm wondering if you could help me. AccuCut provides a pdf that you can use to help you position your artwork. Did you use this pdf for your artwork. What program did you use to import the pdf and draw over it? Any help in this are would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Great video! I have a question. I don't see clearly if your Die has registration marks so the paper/cardboard doesn't move. Does it have something to align the cardboard? Please provide the Die Cut maker! Thank you!
@@jasonelicker3473Is this manual machine commercially available for sale? If so, what is the price and where from can one buy it? H Jha (INDIA) etchjha@gmail.com Friday, 11 October 2019 (00:50 Hrs IST)
wow that's wonderful can you please refer where I can buy this diecut tool online?? and what is the maximum cutting and creasing size for it thanks a lot
Im a die maker and work in the packaging industry as a designer now days, now this way would be a pain in the ass! maybe would be ok for a trial, but big numbers hell no!
@@kkkkkkris1 what would you recommend for cutting out large quantities of cardstock small boxes by the thousands trying to save time doesn't matter if I have to put in some manual labor just want to drastically cut down production time.
One word automation. Depends how much money you want to spend and how many customers you have,cheap diecutters are not too hard to come by. Maybe outsourcing to a local packaging company to diecut would be an option if you had the die and stock, they would only charge setup costs and machine time rather than tooling too..
That thing is good for nothing but proofing jobs for your customers. I mean if you've actually got a whole dies then you're obviously not in for a 10-20 sheets run to begin with.
Proofing would be better done by manual hand cut to eliminate the die cost. This manual die is good for small quantity production, perhaps 100 sheets max.
@@Envinite You're WRONG. This equipment is not suitable for anything beyond 2-3 sheets which would be suffice for proofing the correctness of the dies board itself (which you could also perform the "rough" way by directly striking the printed stocks agains the dies knife directly with a piece of soft wood) Judging from the video, a 100 sheet run would take more than 3 hours on this machine!!! For 100 sheets run as you mentioned, a clamshell is the most suitable choice.
@@avcomth It's not the most efficient sure. But small shops I know use something this like but slightly bigger, that can take more than 8 sheets. I tried with some 40s sheets of 250gsm papers and the cut is decent too. Not a bad option for people that's not in budget or space for larger machines.
So, where do ya actually, like, buy these things, or is that just some trade secret BS from a dying industry that will no longer exist in just a few short years?
@@pkengineering1923 Please quote me the price of this manual crankshaft melty misfit die cutting machine. H Jha (INDIA) etchjha@gmail.com (+91) 9891792271 Friday, 11 October 2019 (00:58 Hrs IST)