"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Does anybody know what are the limits of our system are?Let’s say the Saati unit can expose 120 dpi, can the screen, emulsion, ink, squeegee and possibly most important of all T Shirt hold this?
Big boy Toys.. Could you imagine when (potentially new) customers find out there designs can be imaged on a screen at 120lpi? I can't see them wanting to use another screen printer.. Not to mention the end consumer- just wait till the find out they are rocking 120lpi t-shirts.. Pure madness in the market place- a true disrupter..Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Quote from: starchild on October 18, 2017, 10:43:02 PMBig boy Toys.. Could you imagine when (potentially new) customers find out there designs can be imaged on a screen at 120lpi? I can't see them wanting to use another screen printer.. Not to mention the end consumer- just wait till the find out they are rocking 120lpi t-shirts.. Pure madness in the market place- a true disrupter..Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalkthe question is how 120 lpi comes out on a t-shirt anyway. And not very many of my customers even begin to understand line counts and angles, and I'm talking about large marketing companies with international clients. They just rely on us to get it right and tell them how much it costs.Steve
Nobody, and I mean nobody needs 120lpi to print on a shirt. The most majestical prints I've ever seen (not done by us) have been at 60-70lpi. So if it can hold that, that's all you need. Ever. Period. We are printing on shirts people, not paper.Just the shear thought of not spending thousands in D2A ink, and 5-7k in print heads every two years makes it an easy buying decision.Now how quickly does it Image a screen....that's my question. If its right about 1-2 minutes I'd be happy.
Quote from: Maxie on October 18, 2017, 11:43:42 PMDoes anybody know what are the limits of our system are?Let’s say the Saati unit can expose 120 dpi, can the screen, emulsion, ink, squeegee and possibly most important of all T Shirt hold this?I wouldn't go too far down that rabbit hole. Short answer is no, a jersey weave T with ink printed straight to it is not really going to benefit from advanced lpi- mathematically speaking you'll have many of the dots falling in between the wales. Common mesh counts used will block a lot of small dots with the enlarged knuckles present with higher micron thread thicknesses. Now, a CMYK over solid base plate areas absolutely will benefit and especially if you utilize rosettes. For a good reference point- if magazines were printed at the lpi we run they'd look like junk. Definitely there are emulsions available that can resolve higher lpi and inks, blades and mesh that can image them. To me, the real benefit of increased dpi which, in the case of CTS units, translates directly to ppi or the resolution of your 1bit tiff rip file is that you have more pixels to mess around with for dot linearization. The smallest piece of data you can image is 1px at whatever res you are outputting at. I've found that you can't fully dial a tone curve for screen printing unless you start at a min 900ppi. I don't understand the math behind it all necessarily but I do know that I can tighten up our tone curve at 900 but have to make compromises at 600. Practically speaking, my only reason for desiring higher dpi.
Quote from: ZooCity on October 19, 2017, 01:10:44 AMQuote from: Maxie on October 18, 2017, 11:43:42 PMDoes anybody know what are the limits of our system are?Let’s say the Saati unit can expose 120 dpi, can the screen, emulsion, ink, squeegee and possibly most important of all T Shirt hold this?I wouldn't go too far down that rabbit hole. Short answer is no, a jersey weave T with ink printed straight to it is not really going to benefit from advanced lpi- mathematically speaking you'll have many of the dots falling in between the wales. Common mesh counts used will block a lot of small dots with the enlarged knuckles present with higher micron thread thicknesses. Now, a CMYK over solid base plate areas absolutely will benefit and especially if you utilize rosettes. For a good reference point- if magazines were printed at the lpi we run they'd look like junk. Definitely there are emulsions available that can resolve higher lpi and inks, blades and mesh that can image them. To me, the real benefit of increased dpi which, in the case of CTS units, translates directly to ppi or the resolution of your 1bit tiff rip file is that you have more pixels to mess around with for dot linearization. The smallest piece of data you can image is 1px at whatever res you are outputting at. I've found that you can't fully dial a tone curve for screen printing unless you start at a min 900ppi. I don't understand the math behind it all necessarily but I do know that I can tighten up our tone curve at 900 but have to make compromises at 600. Practically speaking, my only reason for desiring higher dpi. I'm still running a pretty low tech and unoptimized setup compared to a lot of shops and even I can see a massive difference in quality and control when starting art at 720ppi (imported from illy or when I am doing the design) vs the 300ppi files I get from clients.(I havent tried higher, but there is a noticeable difference between 600 and 720).