"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I've seen someone on here mention doing equal parts (in grams) water and activator, stirring that up separately, then adding it to the ink. Also, CCI offers an additive called softner that is supposed to decrease the hand and give the ink a better flow. Lastly, I've found that if you aren't printing on combed rungspun, the hand is much heavier. Just printed D-White on some ringspun tees with a big blocky design and the hand turned out really nice. Here is what I used for my formula:CCI D-White6% Activator6% Water3% Fixer3% Softner3% Retarder150 s-meshThis combo seems to work well for me most the time.
Quote from: Cole on October 25, 2018, 06:49:25 PMI've seen someone on here mention doing equal parts (in grams) water and activator, stirring that up separately, then adding it to the ink. Also, CCI offers an additive called softner that is supposed to decrease the hand and give the ink a better flow. Lastly, I've found that if you aren't printing on combed rungspun, the hand is much heavier. Just printed D-White on some ringspun tees with a big blocky design and the hand turned out really nice. Here is what I used for my formula:CCI D-White6% Activator6% Water3% Fixer3% Softner3% Retarder150 s-meshThis combo seems to work well for me most the time.What fixer are you using? I’ve always been curious about whether different fixers can be used with other inks. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Speaking more so about discharge base whites. Leaves a crusty feel with a slight hand. Maybe that's the best of it. We ran a few while Tony was here (he left for another job) and it's about the same. Maybe I'm expecting too much.