"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
The next level cvc 50 /50 will not discharge with acceptable results so keep that in mind whatever you do.
I'd use low cure plastisol, and use the highest-mesh screens each suitable for each color. I do this all the time, and even though it doesn't feel like DC, customers (gym customers included) always like them. (We print on more fashion tees than standard tees.)We sometimes use ink that cures @ 300, but ELT-S gives great cure latitude & soft, stretchable prints. Especially good for Next Level; we've had AWFUL times in the past year trying to keep NL shirts from getting too hot & discoloring. If your dryer is short like ours, I recommend laying the shirts as flat as possible on the belt, not folding them. It means running big prints more slowly, but it's better than reprinting the order. (Did that more than once last year - and never had before for this reason!)
If it was me, I would try and sell my customer on a vintage print...front and back.Push the inks through a 225 S.... heathered CVC shirts will look great with a retro vintage print.John
Quote from: RStefanick on July 29, 2017, 05:34:43 PMThe next level cvc 50 /50 will not discharge with acceptable results so keep that in mind whatever you do.Would you run the CVCs with just straight low cure plastisol?