Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I may just be making things up because I haven't done a ton of CMYK ( I want to try those new WOW Virus where they do the separations )But it could be more of the shirt is fibrillating through the print, making the faded look. Have you tried the same thing on a tighter / ring spun, more wash fast tee to see if you get different results?Also another thing is you could lay down a barrier base white, or clear base, which is also supposed to help with dot gain.
We did a CMYK test print that turned out great but after taking it home and washing it in hot water and regular drying, the print faded. We used epic inks and had our gas dryer set to 370-4*. Printed on white gildan 2000s.It should be noted that the shirts washed in cold/cold and cold/warm are holding up much better. But you can't control how people wash their clothes. Is there a way to prevent fading? What happened?Thanks!
Quote from: zanegun08 on July 14, 2017, 12:32:15 PMI may just be making things up because I haven't done a ton of CMYK ( I want to try those new WOW Virus where they do the separations )But it could be more of the shirt is fibrillating through the print, making the faded look. Have you tried the same thing on a tighter / ring spun, more wash fast tee to see if you get different results?Also another thing is you could lay down a barrier base white, or clear base, which is also supposed to help with dot gain.I thought that fibrillation is generally when unprinted fibers come up through a plastisol layer. With waterbased inks, those fibers should be dyed due to the inherent penetration.Somewhat true although epic inks are plastisol
Quote from: Frog on July 14, 2017, 01:21:57 PMQuote from: zanegun08 on July 14, 2017, 12:32:15 PMI may just be making things up because I haven't done a ton of CMYK ( I want to try those new WOW Virus where they do the separations )But it could be more of the shirt is fibrillating through the print, making the faded look. Have you tried the same thing on a tighter / ring spun, more wash fast tee to see if you get different results?Also another thing is you could lay down a barrier base white, or clear base, which is also supposed to help with dot gain.I thought that fibrillation is generally when unprinted fibers come up through a plastisol layer. With waterbased inks, those fibers should be dyed due to the inherent penetration.Somewhat true although epic inks are plastisol
I'd say you are seeing fibrilation. One thing to note with the inks and chemistry that they are translucent and your probably using 305's because of the detail. So your not going to see the same results as say printing a red through a 150 on a white shirt.If your looking for a way to prevent it one trick is to print a clear base over it or use Faux transfer. This will basically seal the print. Good luck but don't go beating your head off the wall over something that really can't be controlled once it leaves your shop.
Quote from: Ross_S on July 14, 2017, 02:34:58 PMI'd say you are seeing fibrilation. One thing to note with the inks and chemistry that they are translucent and your probably using 305's because of the detail. So your not going to see the same results as say printing a red through a 150 on a white shirt.If your looking for a way to prevent it one trick is to print a clear base over it or use Faux transfer. This will basically seal the print. Good luck but don't go beating your head off the wall over something that really can't be controlled once it leaves your shop.Unless it fades on 'em en masse and they want their money back This is hypothetical. It would be great if we could sell cmyk prints to customers and get better at it!