Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
If you want the inks to completely bridge the garment so the ink does not crack, then you will need to flash after (almost) every color.How have you been printing your designs so far? Mesh counts, squeegee blades, flashes, etc?
is the reason for the flashing after each color so that the next color doesn't drive the ink into the fabric as much?-J
Quote from: Colin on August 17, 2015, 09:35:50 AMIf you want the inks to completely bridge the garment so the ink does not crack, then you will need to flash after (almost) every color.How have you been printing your designs so far? Mesh counts, squeegee blades, flashes, etc?It was just one job in particular that I had that didn't look as good as I would have liked after a year. 5 screens - no flashing at all:DCUB 80/20 CCI (probably 150S)3 top colors printed through 200S1 top WHITE 150S (miami smooth)I was printing on Next Level 60/40 blends, can't really flash for long periods, had to use the top white because one of the shirt colors was turquoise which doesn't discharge well. I was printing wet on wet no flashing the underbase or anything so maybe that would have helped? Prints looked great off the press and out of the dryer and heck even the first few washes were ok. But after that, splitsville. How are you all fully encapsulating the shirt fibers with plastisol through higher than 200 mesh? Double stroke?The more I think about it the more I lean toward a Tony state of mind, why not just go the extra effort and print it all waterbased?