"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Can I buy fashion or soft hand as a base, add some percentage of it to a standard plastisol color and print,
By and large the idea is to reduce the ink to be able to pass fine mesh counts and then drive it into the shirt.Try a 230 and heavy pressure, might need two strokes manually.
You can add ANY AMOUNT of base (softee, Chino, etc) to your inks that you want. They are all curable on their own.The ONLY thing you want to be aware of is how disperse your pigments will become = Opacity changes. The more you add, the more your inks will become translucent and eventually have close to no opacity. These bases are BEST used with a pigment type mixing system. This allows you to dial in the ink color/richness of color shade that you want.As for shine: You need to have the ink driven into the shirt. If this means you use a blank screen after a 1 color print to drive the ink further into the garment, then I recommend you do so. My experience with adding any dulling agent to the ink is it changes the feel of the cured garment - gives it a bit of a hand - it is a touch stiffer. Remember we are expanding the ink film that has been pushed into the garment.Side note on hand/stiffness of a soft hand print. The resins used in the different bases cure out to a softer durometer. We are all familiar with durometer hardness with the different squeegees we use. These bases cure out closer to a 50 durometer squeegee (its actually much softer) that the typical 70 durometer for standard plastisol that we are used to. What this means for hand: The ink will have some stickiness/grip to it. For kicks and giggles, go do a print flash print sample of Softee/Chino/Fashion base etc and see how it feels when cured.As for fibrillation........ yea..... nothing on the market traps the fibers as well as we would want. To truly trap the fibers you need to encapsulate the threads which means a stiffer hand... So, if that is your goal, you will need to sacrifice some softness of the print.Hope this helps!