Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Backlight Green is made with a high opacity Base like most standard inks, and they use regular green pigments. Florescent inks are used with a high opacity base as well, but use neon pigments which are very transparent by nature which is why it is very difficult to achieve good coverage. The neon series is similar to the fluorescent ink, but they mix in some white with the ink to give it more opacity.
Quote from: KevWilso on March 03, 2015, 10:49:14 AMBacklight Green is made with a high opacity Base like most standard inks, and they use regular green pigments. Florescent inks are used with a high opacity base as well, but use neon pigments which are very transparent by nature which is why it is very difficult to achieve good coverage. The neon series is similar to the fluorescent ink, but they mix in some white with the ink to give it more opacity. You are where I've bought Triflex Fluorescent the last couple of times. What is THAT exactly? It's all I've used for this customer, but I didn't use you at first. Is there anything new that performs BETTER under blacklight?This guy needs consistency and he's happy...so I'd be hard pressed to change his specs. Unless something really special comes along.Thanks Kevin!
I HATE fluorescents. They have horrid opacity and require basically a 100% white base AND double hitting or a low mesh to look "right" in my experience. Neons seem to perform much better, and many of them are basically identical in color. The one stroke neons KICK. MAJOR. ASS. Great opacity and print like a dream. Kevin's neons are also good and I've been printing those more and more, and they are priced better, but I have to say I liked the comparable One Stroke inks better.