"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Hey guysI just printed my first t-shirt manually (it was 2 colors)Was fun but the shirt did not come out the way I planned it to at all... hahaThe hardest part for me; is getting the 2 colors to align perfectly.What was the most difficult part of the screen printing process for you??And any tips on getting multiple color designs to align perfectly?
Quote from: yoonbokim on September 17, 2018, 07:32:43 PMHey guysI just printed my first t-shirt manually (it was 2 colors)Was fun but the shirt did not come out the way I planned it to at all... hahaThe hardest part for me; is getting the 2 colors to align perfectly.What was the most difficult part of the screen printing process for you??And any tips on getting multiple color designs to align perfectly?First make sure that your two films indeed line up perfectly. That's what the registration marks are for, Three or four crosses or rifle sights on each film.Then, burn the screens in close to the same position for each color. (eventually, you may come up with a system that automatically gets you close or almost perfect in this step)Now, before ever actually printing a real shirt, put a scrap shirt on the press.Print your key color (black if it's in the design) cover it with tape (or mylar sheet taped down or something similar.)Now, line up the next screen so that the marks align. Tighten the screen in the head. Look again at the marks.Print one off. Check it out, if not perfect, wipe off the ink, and adjust the 2nd screen. Repeat as necessary.Note that this all assumes tight screens and a press that does not have play in it.If you don't have that, you will never line up butt registered jobs, and will need to rely on an overlapping trap which then also requires flashing between colors which works but will slow you down.btw how about a pic?
...How about a picture of the press so we know your limitations.I only ask this as my first press (a real POS) had no micros and would never allow me to do multi-color even though was 'supposedly' a 4 color press.