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Direct to garment printing – is it worth the investment?

Textile Solutions


Kornit Digital explains.

Some 30% of all textile items produced today are never purchased.


That is 21 million tonnes of textiles going straight to the rubbish heap. That is 28 trillion litres of water – enough to hydrate 300 million people for a lifetime – wasted on pieces the market doesn’t want.


If you have been dependent on the 18 month, forecast based fashion cycles, whatever the rise of Amazon and the so-called ‘retail apocalypse’ failed to communicate, the rise of a global pandemic economy certainly made clear: the old way won’t work anymore. Your business is being disrupted, whether you act or not. The question is, will you adapt and thrive, or stand pat and nosedive?


The bad news is, your market is fickle and unpredictable, and the internet gives consumers the opportunity to buy anything they want, from whoever will offer the best terms.


The good news is, the tools are now available to empower businesses like yours to meet those fickle and unpredictable demands in real time, and build a streamlined, end to end model of efficiency that gives them what they want while making your operations more profitable – because you only make what you sell, and need never rely on forecasting again.



Create on-demand for long term security

Widely dispersed, international supply chains are ill suited to the needs of today’s wired, ‘see now, buy now’ consumer base. When you are selling via online store, ‘shelf space’ is virtually unlimited, but physically producing each piece to match that inventory is inherently slow and cumbersome, and does nothing to solve your waste issue. That is where a corresponding digital production process meets the challenges presented by digital shopping.


Digital direct to garment (DTG) production technology gives brands, fulfillers, and print companies the versatility they need to create on-demand, and thus minimise inventory risk while offering consumers variety and quality. By introducing a single step production process, which eliminates the need for pre and post treatments, Kornit Digital made the deal even sweeter. Its systems use eco friendly, pigment based inks compatible with any number of common and popular fabrics to serve many types of buyers. T-shirts, hoodies, onesies, jackets, those stretchy yoga pants…pick your colour, and if the design can be rendered on screen, it be printed on that piece, with impressive colour accuracy.


‘Speed of print, the reliability factor, and the cost per print were the three main factors for me,’ said Daragh Murphy of Ireland based Hairy Baby Clothing Company. ‘We have a lot of demand for crazy graphics, and the only way we can reproduce these is by using Kornit technology.’



The right tool for the job

This technology gives print shops a powerful new tool for the right job. Screens will always be there for the large run, bread and butter jobs that don’t use too many colours. But when you need to create something with minimal set up time, unlimited colours, in small numbers, or maybe even just produce some samples without the hassle that comes with analogue processes – digital makes it happen at the push of a button.


These systems offer the capability to print whatever the market demands, in brilliant detail, unlimited colours, and any quantity, and it is always profitable because their speed makes it possible to sell first, then produce, and ship within days or even hours.



Here is where it gets crazy!

People still want embroidery. People still want dye sublimation. People still want vinyl heat transfer. But each of those methods takes time, produces waste, and requires a different machine with a different skill set. So Kornit said, ‘Why not just make them all one machine?’


That brings us to Kornit’s Max technology, which give users every benefit they’ve come to expect from Kornit’s patented sustainable, single step production process—but also 3D imagery that seems to leap off the surface. It simulates stitching. It simulates vinyl heat transfer. It simulates dye sub impressions, and not only on white polyester. And it does all of this using one ink set, with one machine, with a smaller footprint – both carbon and on your production floor.



Word on the street is, ‘It is good’

Georg Stricker of Boender & Beutel in Germany was one of the first to gain hands-on experience with this new equipment.


‘The colours, I must say, are exceptionally good,’ he said of the technology. ‘The designs are looking brighter and more beautiful. You can feel it is something that is unique in the textile industry.’


Hanne Dinkel of Spreadshirt, also in Germany, experienced Kornit Max technology in her production operations, and remarked upon the versatility it offered.


‘With this technology, you can print like embroidery, or you can print like screen printing,’ she. ‘We are printing on demand, and that means we have to handle a lot of different garments. I think it is going to be a gamechanger in the print on-demand business.’


Putting all the pieces together

‘There is a growing realisation and acceptance that on-demand production is the answer to meet the demands of today’s consumer,’ said Kornit Digital CEO Ronen Samuel, upon announcing the release of technology. ‘Kornit’s Max technology defines the future of on-demand, sustainable textile production, and the future is here now. Max offers a rare sustainable symbiosis, more creativity, less waste.’


By capitalising on the true potential of digitised production, producers will generate less waste, and more profits, in the years to come.



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