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Dry Transfers


Bryan71

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If you're just looking for dry transfers - rather than for a specific Wilder product - then look at the Archer range.  https://www.archertransfers.com/.   They have lots of sets and are far more widely available.  Verlinden used to do dry transfers, which are now OOP but you do still see them on eBay and residual stock in some stores.

Edited by Das Abteilung
correction
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4 hours ago, Das Abteilung said:

If you're just looking for dry transfers - rather than for a specific Wilder product - then look at the Archer range.  https://www.archertransfers.com/.   They have lots of sets and are far more widely available.  Verlinden used to do dry transfers, which are now OOP but you do still see them on eBay and residual stock in some stores.

Which are available in the UK from here.

https://historexagents.com/#

 

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Last time I bought a bunch of Archer transfers I bought direct from Archer in the US.  As ever in the UK we seem to be victims of unusually high dealer mark-ups: always a problem when your economy is heavily reliant on retail sales and the finance industry rather than primary and secondary industries.  But for just a few sheets the overseas shipping cost isn't worthwhile.  BNA Modelworld in Australia seem to have a good selection of Archer, and their prices and shipping are reasonable.  I've bought from them too.  Shipping is surprisingly quick. 

 

Any imports valued under £15 won't attract UK import VAT,  but you don't get many Archer sets for £15.

 

One thing I have found with their lettering sets for making serials, names etc where the lettering is closely spaced is that you need to cut out the individual letters to rub down or risk either other letters on the sheet sticking to the model or the letters you've applied being pulled off by sticking back to the sheet when you apply the next.  In many cases the shape of the subject make it impossible to get the whole sheet in place anyway.

 

In the old days of Letraset (remember that?) it used to be advised to pre-release the characters from the sheet by rubbing them with the backing sheet in place first before applying to the workpiece.  Still good advice, methinks.

 

As for application, I have a some ball-ended burnishing tools of different sizes I got from my local branch of Hobbycraft or The Range: can't remember which.  I recall that they came in a set of 2 or 3 double-ended tools: metal ends in a wooden handle.  I have a pair of spring-loaded aluminium-handled ones with adjustable spring tension but I've had them for decades and never seen anything like them since.  Don't press too hard with the metal ones or you can end up mashing the character onto the sheet so that it will never come off.

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Of course, the price for VAT purposes includes post and packing, so you have to allow for that. But even when I've ordered consignments from Archer over the trigger value, my experience over quite a few years now is that Archer consignments direct have never attracted the attention of customs and therefore missed both VAT and the Post Office levy. This is presumably because they fit in an envelope and look like printed matter (which they are). Touch wood this will continue. In contrast, every other imported item I have ordered from anyone, apart from a few very small packets, has been stung since Customs tightened up about a decade ago. 

 

I have a lovely wooden-handled burnishing tool with a rounded polythene (?) end that I got from the local specialist art shop, but we're lucky in having a major school of art in the nearby city and therefore at least one really good artists' materials place. 

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18 hours ago, Das Abteilung said:

No it doesn't.  The CN22 customs declaration calls for the value of the goods contained.

Indeed; but that's the sender. The cost of p and p is usually added onto that figure by HMRC when it arrives in the reception centre (with some exceptions). If it's just a matter of VAT, then "The value of the goods for import VAT is based on the:

basic value of goods, plus postage, packing and insurance, plus any import (Customs or Excise) duties charged"

 

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/notice-143-a-guide-for-international-post-users/notice-143-a-guide-for-international-post-users#postal-packages-imported-arriving-from-countries-outside-the-eu

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