Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Wow... ok, I'm printing WAY harder than that... even when I'm trying to be light about it.How much off contact is that?I guess I need to drop my handle down some and increase the angle. I'm coming up way higher and pushing way harder over the top of my squeegee.Interesting.
Black ink on a white shirt is not like white ink on a black shirt. You don't print them the same. You don't modify your inks the same. Off contact for black ink is not important. Tight screens for black ink is not important. This is the easiest print you can do. You are trying to do it like a white ink print. Thin the ink and print it hard.
QuoteBlack ink on a white shirt is not like white ink on a black shirt. You don't print them the same. You don't modify your inks the same. Off contact for black ink is not important. Tight screens for black ink is not important. This is the easiest print you can do. You are trying to do it like a white ink print. Thin the ink and print it hard.Heartily disagree with just about all of that. But to each their own of course. I print black almost exactly the same as white- hard fill stroke, medium-fast push stroke to print. In fact, I try to sort of normalize the fill/stroke on all the inks I print to ensure better registration. Two strokes means I did something wrong before printing. I'm printing a full back 11x17ish this way right now on 350 pcs and I'm sure glad I don't have to add another stroke. I typically add 20-50% soft hand or a mix of soft hand and fashion base to WFX Epic Matte Black. Did the same when I used QCM 911. I found both blacks to print just fine out of the bucket but prefer the softer hand and decreased gloss with them based down a touch. It's weird I hear lots of people having this issue with black ink not clearing but I've never really had a problem. Maybe some brands are using all the scrap pigment to make black and it has bad print properties as a result? I do notice that a fully opaque, spot black needs to get moving, as most all inks do before loosening up. Tension and OC are always important. Test this yourself. Make a nice monochrome screen of a black and white photo that you'll print with black only and test the difference between that screen properly set up and cleared in a single clean stroke and the way you were doing it in the video.
Hope I didn't offend
Tension and OC are always important. Test this yourself. Make a nice monochrome screen of a black and white photo that you'll print with black only and test the difference between that screen properly set up and cleared in a single clean stroke and the way you were doing it in the video.
Well that there is a good looking print coming off a setup like that. I guess it proves that you have a lot of room to work with in certain scenarios. The low-tension static with no o.c. and a double stroke yielded similar results to my fancy roller frames, triple-duro blade, careful off contact and fill stroke method. If you think about it, a lot more labor went into my setup pre-press than yours but yours did the same job when it came to spot color fills of black on lights. Here's the catch though- if we did a side by side on this with white ink on darks we might see another result. My approach is to treat every screen the same no matter how difficult or simple the print. I probably lose a little on some work and win a little on others with this approach. Thanks for the tip on not lifting the screen. Sucks for me but I can't leave it down with the hard flood. It would inevitably print the shirt on the flood. I had one employee use his belt buckle/stomach to rest the top of the screen and do the flood two handed. If you listen in the vid you can hear the blade whistling on the flood. There's about as much pressure as a print stroke going on there. It's a trade-off: One thing that the method in the quick video allows is consistency across printers. If you have the mesh type, tension, eom, off contact and ink under control you can have multiple printers pull identical, and I mean really close to each other, prints with the hard fill method as it meters out just as much ink as the stencil allows during the fill stroke. It takes a lot of the high-level skill out of the process and lets your printers focus on their stroke pressure, speed and angle.