Last year, a consumer-focused UV printer made a remarkable splash on Kickstarter, marking the first time consumer UV printing made it to the big leagues. Now, LONGER ePrint enters the market, bringing unique innovation, a user-friendly experience, and highly competitive pricing to DIY enthusiasts, startups, and designers alike. Built for creative expression and customizable solutions. The campaign has already achieved an impressive $3.6 million in sales within its first week.
LONGER brings a decade of experience (and four successful crowdfunding campaigns) making 3D printers and laser engravers to this project, plus patents and research credentials from its MIT and Georgia Tech founding team. The ePrint’s headline feature is its dual-printhead design with 12 ink channels, which the company says delivers print speeds up to six times faster than single-head printers when laying down textured white ink layers. Add automated cleaning systems, white ink circulation to prevent clogging, and compatibility with third-party inks, and LONGER has assembled a feature set aimed squarely at cost-conscious small businesses.
Designer: Longer ePrint
Click Here to Buy Now: $1499 $2199 ($700 off). Hurry, only 85/250 left! Raised over $3.7 million.
LONGER runs 12 ink channels across two printheads in the full ePrint model: CMYK color plus six white channels and two varnish channels. Building up textured prints to the maximum 60mm height means laying down multiple passes of white ink. Six white channels working simultaneously stack ink six times faster than a single channel could manage. For flat printing without the texture work, the dual-head configuration cuts print time by 50 to 70 percent. At 1440 DPI resolution, print quality stays consistent while speeds improve.
Running a small custom merch operation means speed directly translates to how many orders you can fulfill in a day. Print a full-color design on a phone case and you’re looking at roughly 2 to 3 minutes at high quality settings, faster if you drop to balanced or draft modes. A dozen custom phone cases in under half an hour. Coasters, small signs, and similar flat items clock in at similar speeds. Want to add that 3D textured effect with raised logos or embossed details? That takes longer since you’re building up layers of white ink, but the dual printheads working together mean you’re still finishing pieces in reasonable timeframes rather than waiting hours per item. The 310mm by 420mm print bed accommodates most personal accessories and small merchandise. You’re not printing posters, but phone cases, drinkware graphics, small wooden signs, custom keycaps, personalized gifts, all the items that make up craft fair tables and Etsy shops fit comfortably.
That 60mm embossing capability opens up applications beyond flat graphics. You can produce tactile braille signage with actual raised dots instead of stickers. Relief sculptures and dimensional art pieces become feasible without molding or casting. Product prototypes gain realistic texture that photographs can’t convey. Custom keycaps for mechanical keyboards, raised logos on promotional items, textured business cards that stand out in a stack. Small batch production of items that would normally require expensive tooling or outsourcing to specialty shops. Running a custom merchandise side business or handling client work for local businesses becomes viable when you’re not paying per-piece service bureau rates or minimum order quantities.
White ink creates problems for every UV printer manufacturer. Leave it sitting idle and it separates, leading to inconsistent prints and clogged nozzles that can brick expensive printheads. LONGER built a continuous circulation system that keeps white ink flowing even when you’re not printing. Automated cleaning cycles purge the printheads periodically to prevent clogs before they start. Most desktop UV printers demand manual maintenance rituals before each job. LONGER designed this to stay ready rather than requiring constant babysitting.
The best part is that this printer isn’t unscrupulously bound to specific ink cartridges – the system is designed to be open, and LONGER accepts third-party ink cartridges, including low-migration ink varieties for printing on plates and packaging. You get twelve 200ml cartridges in the dual-head model, totaling 2.4 liters of capacity. Proprietary cartridge systems lock you into whatever the manufacturer charges. Over months of production, open ink compatibility saves real money.
Flatbed mode handles your standard work on flat materials up to 310mm by 420mm. Wood plaques, acrylic sheets, metal panels, glass coasters, leather patches. The 10mm high-gap printing capability means the printhead stays elevated above the material, so you can print on textured wood, embossed surfaces, or slightly warped materials without the head scraping or smudging wet ink. Phone cases with camera bumps, rough stone tiles, wrinkled leather, all printable without fighting the machine.
Rotary printing opens up cylindrical objects. Water bottles, wine bottles, tumblers, pens, flashlights, anything roughly cylindrical that fits the attachment. The printer rotates the object while printing, wrapping your design around the curve. Transfer film mode takes a different approach by printing onto a special film substrate first. Print your design with the UV printer, then use the included laminator to apply heat and pressure, transferring the design onto fabric. You’re making custom heat-transfer stickers for t-shirts, jackets, bags, hats. Not direct-to-garment printing, but useful when DTG doesn’t work well or when you want that raised, glossy finish that UV ink provides. The laminator handles the heat-press work, so you’re not buying separate equipment.
Roll-to-roll attachment extends the workflow for producing multiple transfers in sequence. Instead of printing individual pieces, you load a roll of transfer film, print continuously, and wind up the finished prints on the output roll. Makes sense if you’re producing batches of vinyl stickers or multiple heat-transfer designs for a clothing run. The conveyor belt attachment serves a similar batching purpose but for rigid objects. Load up phone cases, coasters, or other small items, and the conveyor moves them through the print area automatically. No manual repositioning between pieces. Between these four modes and the accessories that enable them, LONGER built a system that adapts to different production workflows rather than locking you into one application.
Dual lasers and a 16MP camera handle object detection and positioning automatically. In batch mode, the system scans multiple objects, identifies positions, and fills patterns without manual placement for each piece. Software includes AI-powered background removal and pattern generation too.
UV printing generates fumes that need proper ventilation regardless of what the manufacturer says about filtration. LONGER includes air purification and claims operation stays under 60dB, quieter than conversation. At 650mm by 445mm by 330mm and 30kg for the dual-head version, it genuinely fits on a desk rather than demanding dedicated floor space like industrial models. You still want good airflow in your workspace, but the footprint works for small studios or home offices with proper setup.
Early bird pricing breaks down to $1,499 for the single-head ePrint SE with six ink channels, $1,899 for the dual-head ePrint with 12 channels, and $2,949 for the all-in-one combo bundling rotary, laminator, conveyor, and roll-to-roll attachments. US and EU backers get free shipping.
Click Here to Buy Now: $1499 $2199 ($700 off). Hurry, only 85/250 left! Raised over $3.7 million.
The post LONGER’s $1,499 Dual-head UV Printer Prints iPhone Cases, Braille, and Custom Merch in 6x Speed first appeared on Yanko Design.
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