"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
we have been on the PC system for a long time... the pigments have to be stirred nearly every day so the solids dont settle - mainly the fluorescent pigments. if you dont stir, the color will shift, and you will be left with a ton of solids in the bottom of the bucket. we print a ton of repeat prints, some for years... IMS 3 works okay for matching, sometimes they update the formula so instead of using the formula that was used 3 years ago when the ink was first mixed, its now a different color and we have to "fix" it a bit - its not terribly common but its happened to us. we use the 15000 base for everyday inks, they mostly come out okay. cure temp is 320 deg F. i like the amazing base with the cure temp of 300 deg F (dont quote me on that temp though), and colors seem to be a bit better. its not fun to stir in the winter. 99 percent of our work is wet on wet, typically one flash. we rarely use 300 mesh unless its needed.
"Pantone approved" means that the ink company has to get x-percentage of the Pantone book approved....not every color in the book!!!Zelko probably still uses the ink shaker we had in Dover. They are awesome!
Quote from: tonypep on Yesterday at 12:41:54 PM"Pantone approved" means that the ink company has to get x-percentage of the Pantone book approved....not every color in the book!!!Zelko probably still uses the ink shaker we had in Dover. They are awesome!still have the shaker. but - the plastisizer that rises to the top of the pigment is so thin - when you put it in the shaker it finds its way out of the bucket
Quote from: tonypep on Yesterday at 12:41:54 PM"Pantone approved" means that the ink company has to get x-percentage of the Pantone book approved....not every color in the book!!!Zelko probably still uses the ink shaker we had in Dover. They are awesome!they only need to formulate 100 out of almost 3000. And even those do not have to be very close. That certification/approval is a JOKE!