"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Yesterday was my first time printing with discharge inks and I'm pretty excited about the prospect of getting into it I a big way.So I had a play with the DC white.I started with a bunch of diff brand tees to test. Gildan 2000, 6400 & 86000 are ones you will know so I'll explain what happened to them.The only supplier of DC in NZ said no need for a premix DC as I can add concentrate white.They supplied me DC base, DC agent and DC concentrate pigment.DC WB is not a popular printing method here in NZ with less than 5% of print shops doing it. Some of the prints I have seen from these few are pretty poor and nothing like the results you lot are getting.If I'm going to do it i would like to do well.-Rutland Discharge Base WB0255-Rutland Discharge Agent WB0259-Concentrate White DyeI set up a small pocket print on the manual rather than auto for ease of clean etc.Test 1. DC base, 6% agent = natural charge and penetration. (pretty excited at this stage to see it happen)Test 2 DC base 6% agent 10% white pigment = not bright or white enough. No huge changeTest 3 & 4. Same base and agent but 20 and 30% (max) pig = brighter but not hugely whiter and slight hand. Better on a military green, charcoal and orange Test 5. DC base, 8% agent, 30% white pigment = better, brighter but still not great. (maxed out agent and pigment percentages which isn't ideal)There were multiple other things that I tested such as the dryer settings, squeegee duro, pressure, snap, # of pulls, angle, speed etc. some which helped in ways...and lastly an extreme 9% agent 40% pigment.Should I of tried less DC agent than 6% rather than going more? but the white got better with higher %) I would have thought more agent, more charge, but by the sound of it agent can mess with the pigment right?)Should I be adding water or additives to the mix for penetration/ soak?The fibres (through an eye glass) as well as when pulled look well covered and there is some penetration from the other side.I had better results on charcoal, orange and military green...(they all happen to be a slightly lighter fabric weight) Could the lighter fabric, therefore more penetration be the reasoning for this?I had my drier heating ink at average 160-200 degrees for 80 seconds and put through at least twice probably more like 4 times to make sure of full charge. Can white discolour to bone in particular on black because of intense heat? Am I expecting too much from this DC white? It's just not white or remotely close to passable as white IMODo I need a super white premix for straight DC white? no one here seems to talk of adding white pigment like I was recommended by my supplier for a straight white...?At least if I try resolve the issues I have now it will set me in good stead for further testing with both white and colours.Activator/Agent/pigments: How much is too much? What's the ideal % for bright whites, colours, and a good cure.Penetration: Should the ink be soaking through more than I have to give better, consistent results. Here a couple is a photos of the tests.Top= G2000 Bottom= G86000Right to Left: Test 1- 5Close up of DC no pigmentClose up of DC 8%agent 30%whitePenetration from other side.This is a pretty long-winded post but writing it is also helping me get my head around it all.Any advice and opinions would be hugely appreciated before I go and get into some more testing.