Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Great stuff Dan. Sim Process is a less is more type of print approach. With a higher mesh count in 350 range, it helps to recognize that it takes several shirts for the colors to build up on the bottom of the screens in the print. Too often printers look at the first registration print and want to see more ink color and up the squeegee pressure. It can take 8-10 prints for a 350 mesh to build up ink on the following screens and achieve the amount of color intensity wanted. If the first registration print is adjusted with too much squeegee pressure to get color, it can cause unwanted dot gain and kill very fine negative doits of shirt color in the 70%-95% range. The higher the line count the easier this it is to collapse fine negative dots of shirt color. This is a common issue on the base plate print as well. S mesh does help avoid using too much squeegee pressure and helps print the tonals as close to the film image as possible. Linearization is another area that helps sim process. 20% dot gain to film is possible with ink jet, then another 10-20% on print can lose the important tones above 60% if the pre press imagery is not controlled to compensate for dot gain.