Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
How are you coating your screens? Are you putting a back coat on after they dry (squeegee side)? Creating a tunnel for the ink to travel will decrease any dot gain. I would also look at squeegee angle, running them perpendicular as well as finding your optimal speed to print at. Another thing to look at is your off contact to as minimal as possible.
Plus you may need to back off your pressures as everything gets hot from flashing. We notice squeegee rubber soften a bit once all is hot, so I tend to prepare to back pressures almost 10psi at times.
How are you coating your screens? Are you putting a back coat on after they dry (squeegee side)?
but just noting that the 'tunnel for the ink to travel' normally should be as short as possible to limit dot gain. If you are coating thin thread mesh once, letting it dry shirt side down, and giving it a face coat (I'd do it on the shirt/substrate side,) you should have a very smooth stencil going. It helps not only for better exposure for those of us suckers still using film, but better ink release during printing as well.
Since I did the seps, I'd have to point you all in another direction. Question, why flash after the yellow? That red actually needs the yellow to be wet to blend well to create the peach better....Side note on the purple. The glasses look good, but the outline on type doesn't seem to be pulling it's needed darker contrast when mixing with that halftone blue outline of the type. Maybe change that purple to a slightly deeper or more opaque purple?
I think the question he is really asking is how to manage the dot growth and the answer is experience.
I think the main point has already been made well--no matter what your gain is on press, managing it properly in the seps is key to making the printing part easy. I wish I was much better at it. Quote from: AntonySharples on October 21, 2016, 05:54:57 PMHow are you coating your screens? Are you putting a back coat on after they dry (squeegee side)? Creating a tunnel for the ink to travel will decrease any dot gain. I would also look at squeegee angle, running them perpendicular as well as finding your optimal speed to print at. Another thing to look at is your off contact to as minimal as possible.I'm not quite disagreeing with the beginning of this, but just noting that the 'tunnel for the ink to travel' normally should be as short as possible to limit dot gain. If you are coating thin thread mesh once, letting it dry shirt side down, and giving it a face coat (I'd do it on the shirt/substrate side,) you should have a very smooth stencil going. It helps not only for better exposure for those of us suckers still using film, but better ink release during printing as well.The end is very much proper, agree 100%.I'd also add if there's any way to go lighter on pressure on successive WOW screens it could help a bit.