"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
We find a way to get a good base with one stroke, as it means half the time on the press. I personally don't like my underboss to be 100%, I prefer it to be halftones and let the top white make the 100% white parts bright.
recent sample print for Nintendo licensed product. detail and colors came out great but the underbase was very rough giving a very grainy finish. posting the sample print and the original image on paper
that is some very nice work there!try using a roller squeegee to smooth it out. 'should help.pierre
Quote from: ffokazak on February 11, 2019, 01:22:58 PMWe find a way to get a good base with one stroke, as it means half the time on the press. I personally don't like my underboss to be 100%, I prefer it to be halftones and let the top white make the 100% white parts bright.unfortunately, that would not work for us. We use very translucent inks and the ubase has to be paper white or throws of the colors.pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 11, 2019, 02:21:37 PMthat is some very nice work there!try using a roller squeegee to smooth it out. 'should help.pierreThanks Pierre, i appreciate the comment! you do excellent work!using the roller squeegee seems like a good solution, i know the print shop was looking at those at the last trade show but not sure why they didn't go for it. they were mainly looking at those to help with fibrillation.to achieve a bright white, one stroke underbase on black and using the roller squeegee, what mesh count would you suggest? i'm guessing a lower mesh count to allow more ink through for a thicker deposit, like a 260 or lower?
Quote from: PixelPimp on February 11, 2019, 03:48:49 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 11, 2019, 02:21:37 PMthat is some very nice work there!try using a roller squeegee to smooth it out. 'should help.hpierreThanks Pierre, i appreciate the comment! you do excellent work!using the roller squeegee seems like a good solution, i know the print shop was looking at those at the last trade show but not sure why they didn't go for it. they were mainly looking at those to help with fibrillation.to achieve a bright white, one stroke underbase on black and using the roller squeegee, what mesh count would you suggest? i'm guessing a lower mesh count to allow more ink through for a thicker deposit, like a 260 or lower?I think, from what I can see, that we are stuck having to double stroke the white. I have not found a way to deposit enough with only one stroke. It is always off white.So we have two options (other than DC), two stroke a single screen or have two screens. On smaller orders we two stroke (the ROQ can still run 800/hour double stroking if everything is dialed in, not that we do but have on few occasions). On bigger orders, we just set up two screens in a row and single stroke. Thats without flashing. If we had a bigger press, we probably would flash in between.pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 11, 2019, 02:21:37 PMthat is some very nice work there!try using a roller squeegee to smooth it out. 'should help.hpierreThanks Pierre, i appreciate the comment! you do excellent work!using the roller squeegee seems like a good solution, i know the print shop was looking at those at the last trade show but not sure why they didn't go for it. they were mainly looking at those to help with fibrillation.to achieve a bright white, one stroke underbase on black and using the roller squeegee, what mesh count would you suggest? i'm guessing a lower mesh count to allow more ink through for a thicker deposit, like a 260 or lower?
that is some very nice work there!try using a roller squeegee to smooth it out. 'should help.hpierre