If you guys thought you loved Oracal vinyl before... you're going to be obsessed now! Last week Orafol the parent company that manufactures Oracal vinyl - known to most Silhouette crafters as Oracal 651 and 631 vinyl[1]- along with other adhesive films and tapes invited me down to their USA headquarters and factory for a development meeting and tour. Mind blown.
You guys I had no idea there was so much that goes into manufacturing adhesive craft vinyl...and there's so much more of where that came from! There's so much that the craft world hasn't even seen yet and I'm so excited for you guys to see some of the possibilities and things that will soon be hitting the market....and don't worry - I went armed with your vinyl wish lists!
Since I couldn't bring all of you along with me - I figured the next best thing was to take you on a behind the scenes tour through some pictures I took at Orafol's plant just outside Savannah, Georgia.
By the time the vinyl gets to you - it's on a nice 12x12 sheet or maybe a 12" 5 yard roll. But the Oracal 651 and 631 vinyl[2] you craft with starts off nothing like that...
There's a lot that happens before it even gets to this point. The colored film is brought in from Orafol's factory in Germany - where the company originally started in the early 1800's.
Huge rolls of paper gets a special waxy finish on them first. This is what allows the vinyl from sticky to the paper backing when it's removed with transfer tape.
Then the back of the paper is printed and marked with Oracal, grid lines, and the vinyl type such as 651.
Then the 48" rolls of now-adhesive-backed vinyl and the printed-paper backing meet on another huge belt. The two are rolled onto huge rolls called the mother roll.
Robots move around hundreds of rolls of vinyl, tape, and film through the factory helping box it, cut it, and load it for shipping with the help of more than 100 factory workers.
So what does the Oracal vinyl[3] look like when it leaves the factory? It's cut down to a minimum of
12" x 100 yard rolls and then is then shipped out to distributors like Swing Design[4] who then sell to other re-sellers or directly to the customer. When the vinyl arrives at their warehouse it's then cut down even further into sheet and roll sizes more manageable for the home crafter: 12x12 sheet, 12x24" sheets, or smaller length rolls.
And then it's placed into swatch books - one strip and one book at a time. You can actually get your hands on a 651 Vinyl swatch/sample book[5] here.
How cool is that! Did you have ANY idea all that went into making craft vinyl?! I had no clue...and now I have a whole new appreciation for my Oracal 651 and 631.
Note: This post may contain affiliate links. By clicking on them and purchasing products through my links, I receive a small commission. That's what helps fund Silhouette School so I can keep buying new Silhouette-related products to show you how to get the most out of your machine!
References
- ^ Oracal 651 and 631 vinyl (amzn.to)
- ^ Oracal 651 and 631 vinyl (amzn.to)
- ^ Oracal vinyl (amzn.to)
- ^ Swing Design (www.swingdesign.com)
- ^ 651 Vinyl swatch/sample book (amzn.to)
- ^ Subscribe Here (www.silhouetteschoolblog.com)
- ^ (www.silhouetteschoolebook.com)