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Mrs. Gloss, Boston/Maine Age and Occupation: 24, Designer/soon-to-be Architect Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Systems Engineer Engagement Date: May 23, 2008 Wedding Date: August 2009 Venue: SS Katahdin/Lakeside Tent About Me: I don't like nickels or the skin that forms on pudding when it's in the fridge for too long. I couldn't live without Pantone markers, fountain soda (3/4 diet, ¼ regular Coke), run-on sentences, or ridiculously oversized sunglasses. I will try to DIY almost anything and am just OCD enough to make most of it work. I am truly excited about having all my family and friends together, becoming Mrs. Gloss, and having amazing photos to prove it!
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In case I didn’t mention it before, I printed our invites using a Gocco. Since there have been many informative tutorials on Gocco printing by other bees all linked to the wiki, I don’t think we need to rehash all the details here again, but I wanted to share some tips and tricks with you that I found helpful!!

1. Be prepared for a mess.

Printing and drying takes up a good amount of space. Also prepare for the fact that you will ’print’ at least once without putting paper in and then have to clean your screen. (A little Windex does the trick!)

2. Never print the first few prints on your good paper. Do at least two or three prints to get the ink evened out and to understand where you need to align your paper.

3. If you are going to ’wash’ and reuse your screen, cover the edges in clear plastic packing tape. Make sure you don’t cover up any of the area that got ’burned’, but also that you cover all the surrounding chipboard area. Otherwise when you wash the ink off, the edges of your screen will soak up the water and get mushy and warped.

4. To help align your design, make small marks on your Gocco pad to help you perfectly align them each time. I emphasized these marks more than I actually drew them on the pad (these were to align our envelopes) but they were SO helpful! (Again, just wash them off with Windex when you are done!!)

5. Do double duty if you can! Plan your screens so that you can burn more than one image if you have enough space. I planned out my screens so that there were more than one element on each since Gocco supplies are so precious nowadays! The screen below has all the elements for the backs of our cards and the ’and’ that was between our names. I printed the ’and’ first, and then simply covered it with a piece of paper so that the ink wouldn’t transfer when I was printing the other sections.

Another ’double duty’ tip: I sized our address for our RSVP cards so we could also use it for the return address on our outer envelope. I printed the RSVP envelopes first, since the ink was a lighter color (then washed it) and printed the navy ink on the outer envelopes!

6. Use ink blocker around your design even if you are only printing in one color. The ink is going to spread out all over your screen once you press down. If you use the ink blocker it restricts the ink to a certain area, less ink is wasted since it cannot spread out all over the screen.


**Right after I took this pic I turned around to set my camera on the coffee table and hit the Gocco with my knee. It proceeded to slam down and printed a RSVP on my registration plate - hence tip #1.

7. If you are printing to the edges of your paper, be prepared to clean your registration plate and screen a lot more than normal. I extended the lines from our names past the edges of the paper to make sure they would print all the way to the edges. Not my smartest move, and each time I printed, a little extra ink squirted out where I had extended the line. So roughly every 5 or so prints, I cleaned the registration plate and excess ink off the screen at the very end of the lines. O’well, you live, and you learn.

8. Keep your screens!! We had a few people that didn’t receive our save the dates, so I’m keeping our invite screens just in case we need to make more. I wrapped them in plastic wrap and put them in a plastic bag in the fridge - this keeps the ink from drying (mostly).

Do you have any useful Gocco tips to share?

Previously Covered:

Up Next:

  • Embossing & Wax Sealing 101
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13 Responses to “The Glossy Invitations: Gocco Tips & Tricks”

1.
kosstobe
Member
kosstobe (message)  231 posts, Helper bee

Great tips, Miss Gloss. I was thinking about getting a gocco but I’m still not sure. Is there any texture to the ink when it’s done drying? Is it raised on the paper like it would be with thermographic printing or embossing?

 
2.
Miss Gloss
Bee
Miss Gloss (message)  1,055 posts, Bumble bee

@kosstobe: Since the ink is wet you can put embossing powder on it and then heat it up with a heat gun and it will create a raised effect…the ‘blue handwritten’ text is actually embossed on my invites. It’s really hard to tell from the pics but you can definitely feel it! Embossing is in the next post!

 
3.
mrspaetz
Member
mrspaetz (message)  1,707 posts, Bumble bee

gocco sounds very complex. eeeek.

 
4.
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Bee
Mrs. Emerald (message)  901 posts, Busy bee

I always admire gocco users! It just seems like a really intimidating, complicated contraption to me, haha

 
5.
jmc
Member
jmc (message)  475 posts, Helper bee

@Mrs. Emerald: @mrspaetz: Seriously!!

 
6.
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Guest
Kosstobe

@Miss Gloss: awesome, looking forward to that post!

 
7.
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Member
NJerseyABC (message)  21 posts, Newbee

I use post it notes on my Gocco pad to line up my blanks to ensure the print is in the same spot for each print instead of doing the marks like you do in #4… but then this only works if your paper or print location is skewed so that there is ‘blank’ pad space.

 
8.
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Guest
sphbride

Oh yeah, I manually printed my invitations with Gocco too. Let’s see, the invitation page, 2 information cards and the envelope. That was at least 4×100 presses.

One thing to note is that Gocco doesn’t print well on textured paper - I learend it the hard way :)

I think on hindsight I wish I had discovered overnightprints.com instead … :)

 
9.
Miss Gloss
Bee
Miss Gloss (message)  1,055 posts, Bumble bee

@mrspaetz: @Mrs. Emerald: It’s not, I promise! If you can work a stamp/stamp pad you can work a gocco :)
@NJerseyABC: Good call!

 
10.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Champagne (message)  1,068 posts, Bumble bee

wait, you actually print on your stage before printing on paper? (I’m referring to #1 where you say you have to clean the screen) I’m confused…

 
11.
Miss Gloss
Bee
Miss Gloss (message)  1,055 posts, Bumble bee

@Mrs. Champagne: I just meant that usually I end up accidentally closing the housing without adding paper and end up printing on the plate… definately not on purpose :)

 
12.
Guest Icon
Guest
rannfar

I just got a gocco and am going to start printing soon. I’m nervous but excited to try it out.
I’m didn’t know that you could wash your screens and use a new color. What do you wash them with?

 
13.
Firefighter_Prazs_Girl
Hostess
Firefighter_Prazs_Girl (message)  819 posts, Busy bee

I am so nervous to do mine! I have saved this post I am sure I will look at it a thousand times before I attempt this!

 


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Mrs. Gloss Mrs. Gloss, Boston/Maine Age and Occupation: 24, Designer/soon-to-be Architect Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Systems Engineer Engagement Date: May 23, 2008 Wedding Date: August 2009 Venue: SS Katahdin/Lakeside Tent About Me: I don't like nickels or the skin that forms on pudding when it's in the fridge for too long. I couldn't live without Pantone markers, fountain soda (3/4 diet, ¼ regular Coke), run-on sentences, or ridiculously oversized sunglasses. I will try to DIY almost anything and am just OCD enough to make most of it work. I am truly excited about having all my family and friends together, becoming Mrs. Gloss, and having amazing photos to prove it!
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