"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I am about to print on some shirts that are 92% cotton / 8% spandex....I've never printed on this before..is there anything unique I need to know about it or do i simply approach it like I do on 100% cotton shirts which is what i planed on. The shirts are black....ink colors are white and metallic gold.also i have some 60% cotton and 40% polyester....do i print this like 100% cotton also?..same colors.
Quote from: Mark @ Hurricane Printing on August 10, 2014, 04:45:17 PMI am about to print on some shirts that are 92% cotton / 8% spandex....I've never printed on this before..is there anything unique I need to know about it or do i simply approach it like I do on 100% cotton shirts which is what i planed on. The shirts are black....ink colors are white and metallic gold.also i have some 60% cotton and 40% polyester....do i print this like 100% cotton also?..same colors.The Spandex puppies will need stretch ink, or stretch additive.The 60/40 are the usual low bleed ink candidates paying heed to the required lower temperatures.
use a lowish mesh count also for both base and top coats... or PFPIdeally a 59s (150s i think you guys call it)You need a reasonable ink deposit in order for the ink to stretch with fabric without splitting.
I would either mixed into your BASE COLOR - or print the stretch ink of choice as a BASE Screen.I would not want to add much to a metallic ink as it would reduce the amount of glitter flake being laid down. But through an 80 mesh.... p/f/p.... you should be able to get away with it.TEST TEST TESTAs always, a thicker deposit of ink is best. I always explain stretch ink thickness this way:Take 2 rubber bands. One thick and one thin. put them side by side in your hand and start stretching them over and over and over..... which rubber band starts to wear out first? The thinner one A thicker deposit of stretch is always better.
I also prefer to mix it into the white base.But Mark does not have the art setup that way he says.Mark:You can either mix the stretch into your inks... or print it alone as a base plate. You have a number of options.