"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Discharge is sooooooo simple I'm sure as our customer base starts requesting more of it we'll do more and more but in the mean time, I'll stick to plastisol for most of our work and the other 5-10% will be single color DC. I like being able to do everything with single strokes and seeing problems as they happen and not at the end of the dryer. Not to mention having to not worry about the type of garment and its "dischargeability" is kind of nice.Of course I'll concede that there are quite a few things that DC is better at than plastisol and we use it when applicable, but I think that sometimes the IDEA that DC is a piece of cake is thrown around a bit too cavalier. I think a few shops struggle with plastisol and turn to DC for the answers and the lucky ones find it, but many reluctantly turn back to plastisol and continue to fight with it hoping the magic ink comes out soon. The actual part of pushing/pulling the squeegee is easier with DC but everywhere else it's not as black and white.
I was told that they will be doing pantone colors.
I'm going to pick some of this up asap. I hate mixing reds...I have found that lower activator is better, usually around 3% vs. the 6% for some other colors.I haven't had much issue with fading after washing when adding matsui fixer.
bumping this up...how do you guys like the fox red so far? I'm always the last to get samples cuz I don't have any cool friends but we just got a few dropped off yesterday...we tested it on the same shirt as a sericol print....both with 3% activator....sericol won the battle hands down, and I am pullling for CCI RFU inks like a mo'fo' too but...I'll stick with the sericol for now.