Real Estate Corflute Lawn Spike Full Set

Real Estate Corflute Lawn Spike Full Set


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  • In stock, ready to ship
  • Inventory on the way
Regular price$55.00
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Tax included.

Corflute is corrugated polypropylene – a type of plastic – usually 3mm or 5mm in width. You'll most likely have seen corflute signage used as part of political advertising, by real estate companies advertising local homes, or on temporary construction sites

Also known as Coroplast, FlutePlast, IntePro, Proplex, Correx, Twinplast, Corriflute or Corflute – refers to a wide range of extruded twinwall plastic-sheet products

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Sydney & Melbourne
Same - 2 Working days

Metro NSW 
(Newcastle / Wollongong)
1 - 3 Working days

Gold Coast & Brisbane
1 - 3 Working days

Adelaide & Canberra
2 - 4 Working days

Hobart & Perth
3 - 7 Working days

Darwin
7 - 14 Working days

Remote Area in
NSW VIC ACT SA QLD
3 - 14 Working days

Remote Area in
NT WA North QLD TAS Island
over 7 Working days*

The estimated shipping times always for reference only. A track number will be sent to you after your order has been shipped so that you can estimate when your items will arrive the destination. Please note that the tracking information might not update in real time immediately. We are not responsible for shipping delays or item missing caused by Couriers. We will try our best to help and we will provide couriers contact details. From 2015-2017 we only have 1 missed item and 99.8% on time shipping record in last 1000 shipping history. (Last updated in 20th March 2021)


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Frequently Asked Questions about Printing

Bleed Area

In printing, bleed is printing that goes beyond the edge of where the sheet will be trimmed. In other words, the bleed is the area to be trimmed off. The bleed is the part on the side of a document that gives the printer a small amount of space to account for movement of the paper, and design inconsistencies.

2mm Bleed (inner and outside the cut area) on Business Cards, Flyers, Brouchres, Stickers, Posters, Magnets

5mm Bleed (inner and outside the cut area) on All Booklets

1cm Bleed (inner and outside the cut area) on All Signs and Banners

Too hard to understand?

Please go to our how to add bleeding page see more details about bleedings

No worries, we will double inspect and remind the buyer if your artwork has any problem about the bleeding.

How RGB and CMYK Different

Your monitor is composed of pixels and each pixel can display over 16 million colours. These colours are in what is called the RGB Gamut which, in very simple terms, is composed of all of the colours in light. Your printer can only reproduce around a few thousand colours thanks to the principle of absorption and reflection. Again, in simple terms, the pigments and dyes absorb the light colours that aren't used and reflect back to you the CMYK combination that closely approximates the actual colour. In all cases, the printed result is always a bit darker than the screen image. If you are new to this topic the above advice might seem a bit convoluted. The bottom line is the number of colours available in a particular Colour Space. Colour printers such as the Inkjet printer in your office have Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black cartridges. These are the traditional printing inks and the colour is made by combining those four colours. With ink, the number of colours that can be produced fall ,roughly, into a maximum of a couple thousand distinct colours. Images on a computer screen use a totally different colour space – RGB. The colours created are made with light. In broad terms the number of colours your computer monitor can display total about 16.7 million colours. (The actual number is 16,77,7216 which is 2 to the 24th power.)

You Can't Print Light, So Your Images Print Darker.

If you draw a circle on a sheet of paper and put a black dot in the middle of that circle you will get a good idea of why colours change. The sheet of paper represents all of the colours – visible and invisible – infrared, ultraviolet, x-rays – known to modern man. That circle represents the RGB gamut and, if you draw another circle inside the RGB circle you have your CMYK gamut. If you move from a corner of that sheet of paper to the dot, in the middle that indicates how colour moves from invisible to a black hole which is the dot. The other thing you will notice is that as you move towards the dot, colours get darker. If you choose a red in the RGB colour space and move it to the CMYK colour space the red will darken. Thus RGB colours output as CMYK colors are pulled to their nearest CMYK equivalent which is always darker. So why does your printer output not match your screen? Simple. You can't print light.

CONFIRMATION:

Please check all details thoroughly. However NO responsibility will be taken for any mistake (wrong typesetting or design), when artwork has been approval. Artwork CAN NOT BE use or send to other design company before full payment has been received. If you provide your own artwork, Please make sure the size and the image quality is correct and ready to print before the payment.


COLOURY:

our printer does not print the colours as you see them on your monitor. The picture looks great on the monitor, but does not print true to the screen. This is absolutely true. You will never get a perfect match because the image on the screen and the image kicked out of your printer are two different beasts. Your screen's pixels are emitted light. Your printer simply can't print light. It uses dyes and pigments to replicate the colours.


We are not required to provide a refund or replacement if you change your mind. But you can choose a refund or exchange if an item has a major problem. This is when the item:
• has a problem that would have stopped someone from buying the item if they had known about it
• is significantly different from the sample or description
• doesn’t do what we said it would, or what you asked for and can’t be easily fixed.

Custom order, design or printing item, we do not accept returns because a buyer has changed their mind, wrong artwork approvals or chosen the wrong item.

Return postage will be paid by buyer.

The estimated shipping times always for reference only. A track number will be sent to you after your order has been shipped so that you can estimate when your items will arrive the destination. Please note that the tracking information might not update in real time immediately. 

Sydney & Melbourne
Same - 2 Working days

Metro NSW 
(Newcastle / Wollongong)
1 - 3 Working days

Gold Coast & Brisbane
1 - 3 Working days

Adelaide & Canberra
2 - 4 Working days

Hobart & Perth
3 - 7 Working days

Darwin
7 - 14 Working days

Remote Area in
NSW VIC ACT SA QLD
3 - 14 Working days

Remote Area in
NT WA North QLD TAS Island
over 7 Working days*

Although we are not responsible for shipping delays or item missing caused by Couriers we will try our best to help and we will provide couriers contact details. From 2015-2019 we only have less than 0.01% missed item and 99.8% on time shipping record in last 1000 shipping history. (Last updated in 20th March 2021)