Anyone interested in manufacturing old school Tip-On Jackets -
4YearGraduate
2,945 Posts
My people at Dorado have just restarted with an amazing new set up. I have toured the floor and the result is super legit.
Not trying to spam but i know alot of people have wondered how to even go about making these in 2011...
Been a long time since I held an LP sleeve and had that feeling -
interview about it:
Not trying to spam but i know alot of people have wondered how to even go about making these in 2011...
Been a long time since I held an LP sleeve and had that feeling -
interview about it:
Comments
i have this Edwards Generation 'The Street Thang' LP. I believe it to be a counterfeit(?) but it has a thick paste-on sleeve. How come bootleggers get to have these sleeves and legit current issues don't?
Back then, tip ons were not considered a deluxe printing technique - they were actually just cheap way to make a cover. In fact, when I started collecting records back in the 70's they were considered inferior to their import counterparts.
Nowadays they are fetishized because they are old school. The new versions are also much nicer than they were back then. Columbia tip on style sleeves were garbage, imo, and it is notoriously hard to find certain titles (Kind Of Blue, for example) with nice quality printing/manufacturing.
Leon, I am pretty sure you have an OG if it's got the paste-on back (that term makes more sense to me than "tip-on"). The newish reissue is white card-stock. (unless there was an earlier boot I am not aware of).
Whoever Light In The Attic used for the Jim Sullivan LP reissue did a great job. Nice thick, prosperous, Real American cardboard.
It's 2011, the jackets being made now should be at least as good as the best jackets ever made before. Things should get better over time, not worse. We lost our way when we started skimping on quality and durability.
Agreed!
b/w
The turning point?
Dorado is doing REAL tip-on sleeves - Meaning they are two pieces of med wieght cardboard sandwiched with printed cardstock and glued at the seams, an arduous process which is almost entirely hand done at this point and the same if not better than 70's sleeves. I have seen tests with paper stock which can result in an identical CTI gatefold, not the easiest thing to do. I understand the weight can be different (i guess?) but the entire process, at least at Dorado, is cusomizable, you could sandwich whatever weight cardboard or stock you want, as the process is hand done each time so if you want lighter cardboard in there just ask.
Dorado did the Light In The Attic sleeves and paper inserts but i would urge anyone to check the recent release by Beirut to see an amzing, forward thinking possibility of Tip On (cloth wrapped around instead of paper, then foil stamped - it looks amazing)
HELL YES. and with dudes in a shop sweating it out here in Cali while most are offshoring their manufacturing to china. Support that ish if you love quality vinyl releases.