"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
When I first started, we had a Vaster on which the squeegees were mounted in handles, that attached to a T bar (with bearings) that ran across the shirt left to right instead of up and down as normal. For a simple 2c, say red on the bottom and blue on the top, it worked pretty well. Later on, we just started doing the same thing with halftones and multiple screens. You don't have to mount anything sideways, just set the art up to do what you want and print normally.steve
I posted a while ago about one I did that was with discharge inks. That was a giant pain in the ass because of how runny they were and having to keep the screen more or less level the whole time. I have done it a few times now with plastisol and it is a breeze as long as you arent using super runny inks.
Quote from: Sbrem on September 02, 2015, 04:44:03 PMWhen I first started, we had a Vaster on which the squeegees were mounted in handles, that attached to a T bar (with bearings) that ran across the shirt left to right instead of up and down as normal. For a simple 2c, say red on the bottom and blue on the top, it worked pretty well. Later on, we just started doing the same thing with halftones and multiple screens. You don't have to mount anything sideways, just set the art up to do what you want and print normally.steveThat sounds crazy! Would like to see one of those. Did you have to go between the pallets to pull the print sideways? We rarely do split fountains anymore, easier & more consistent to halftone it & be done. That way you don't get blending issues or ink wastage. I think we tried printing sideways once... No dice, pretty awkward if you have to do a lot of them. I do love me some split fountain posters though. I think they're much better suited for flat stock.