"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: ZooCity on October 24, 2011, 04:45:17 PMIf you're going to use reducer as a base better make sure it's curable reducer. I would recommend keeping your reducer around for, well, reducing and use a soft hand base for your inks. QCM has Softee, Wilflex has Fashion Soft, etc., etc. The soft bases can either be pigmented directly with a PC system (which, by the way John does not make a pastel ink, the soft bases are clear. you may be referring to the look of a bright color in soft base that was driven too far into the fabric?) or used to hyper-extend rfu inks. Using the soft bases you can get a faded look via the fibrilation that will occur from printing a plastisol that is actually quite 'watery' and will not matt down all the fibers of the garment. The further you drive the soft based ink into the shirt the more you'll see this fibrilation/fading. We have to distinguish the differences with soft hand bases and fashion bases. Soft hand base is transparentFashion bases are opaque. You usually add soft hand to an ink, helping to soften the inks for a better feel and shorten the body of the inks for easier printing and to extend them with a max 50% load when printing on whites or lights. Color shifting is to be expected and colors lighten due to the transparency of the soft hand. The biggest use for soft hand is extending RFU's and producing process colors in house as it's 5% ink to 95% base. Great for making concentrated magenta's and lighter cyan's. With fashion bases, you're adding color to them with loads up to 10% This low viscosity base allows the use of higher mesh so you can either smash it into the shirt to simulate waterbase or on top as a very soft handed simulated process print. Curable reducers reduce the viscosity of the inks while helping to maintain opacity to make it easier to print through high mesh counts. What they don't do is create softness, rather the opposite with a hard feeling ink. This can be the ideal look for a weathered or cracked looking retro shirt when combined with crackle or other specialty bases. This reducer is also great for thinning your white inks to make them print faster and move away from the dreaded 110-140 mesh count range. Base your white a little and print through a 160+ mesh, you get an opaque faster printing base and use less ink doing so. Explore and experiment with different bases as when combined.. they can do amazing.. and horrible things so be sure to read the load ratings of ink vs base and document document document how you made it!
If you're going to use reducer as a base better make sure it's curable reducer. I would recommend keeping your reducer around for, well, reducing and use a soft hand base for your inks. QCM has Softee, Wilflex has Fashion Soft, etc., etc. The soft bases can either be pigmented directly with a PC system (which, by the way John does not make a pastel ink, the soft bases are clear. you may be referring to the look of a bright color in soft base that was driven too far into the fabric?) or used to hyper-extend rfu inks. Using the soft bases you can get a faded look via the fibrilation that will occur from printing a plastisol that is actually quite 'watery' and will not matt down all the fibers of the garment. The further you drive the soft based ink into the shirt the more you'll see this fibrilation/fading.
Once you base down your inks you pretty much have to chunk the ink when done right? Or keep it around for another similar job... is that really practical?
Quote from: Gilligan on October 23, 2011, 10:37:44 PMOnce you base down your inks you pretty much have to chunk the ink when done right? Or keep it around for another similar job... is that really practical?If we're talking curable reducer for "base down", no, IMO, you don't have to throw it away. As some of you know, I was shut down for 2+ years and everything went in storage, including inks. Since getting set up, I have printed two small jobs where I used ink that had curable reducer added over 2 years ago. Union Bright Cotton White and Wilflex Genesis Red. Inks stirred up easily and both jobs cured fine.
Is viscosity buster curable in any amount? I'm wary of bringing anything in that will render anink incurable.
Moose, that sounds like a clever technique, but I'm wondering if your outline screen could have done double duty as the "stamper" as well.1. Fill print on pellon (or scrap shirt)2. Outline print, wet on wet of course, on pellon3. Outline print, including ghost image on actual shirt.
Quote from: Frog on October 27, 2011, 09:08:19 AMMoose, that sounds like a clever technique, but I'm wondering if your outline screen could have done double duty as the "stamper" as well.1. Fill print on pellon (or scrap shirt)2. Outline print, wet on wet of course, on pellon3. Outline print, including ghost image on actual shirt.Hey Frog,Didn't think of that but I can't see why that would not work just as well and obviously (to me now ) save a screen. I will give that a try next time, thanks for the wisdom.mooseman