1903bluepill wrote:I've had these for years. Note the dent on the can on the left. Thats because due to corrosion of the aluminum under the label the can has leaked and is no longer pressurized. Most are semi full and must be handled gently. I tried to remove one from the plastic tab and the can started to crush.
As was standard practice then and still is, dummy /prop beer was made using cans of near beer or ginger ale. Printed paper or very thin vinyl was used for the label material. I tried to peel back a corner of one of the labels to see what brand is underneath but can't get it to budge without destroying it.
Rol--
Did anyone save the picture(s) that "1903bluepill" posted? I've been looking for a good picture of the Coops beer prop label, because I want to recreate it and silkscreen print it onto a T-shirt. It must have been a good picture if J.J. Walters could read
"Method developed by our founder J.L. Coops in 1917" on it.
By the way, recreating stuff like this for screen printing is my specialty, as long as I have a good quality source to work from. I make everything as exact as possible; i.e., for text if I can't find a matching font I draw the letters manually. For example, I drew this based on the Simon & Simon screenshot posted in this thread, combined with a screenshot from MPI:
That's just a rough draft. If I had a good quality picture of the label I could recreate the whole thing (and make the "Coops" text more accurate as well). Ideally, I'd screenprint it in gold metallic plastisol ink onto a dark brown or black T-shirt. That should recreate the reflective properties of the label as seen in MPI ...
... which was also printed with metallic ink. Metallic ink has fine metal powder mixed into it which makes it somewhat reflective. It can only be applied with traditional printing processes such as silkscreen or offset. Those modern direct-to-garment (DTG) printers, which are just specialized inkjet printers, as used by online custom T-shirt places like CafePress.com, can't do it.
I've screenprinted a lot of T-shirts, and this would be an easy one to do if I could only get a good picture of the label to get started.