"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Anyone else follow this guy on Instagram? https://instagram.com/madspecials His prints are crazy!
3D foiling is very easy. We printed a ton of this back in the 80's and 90's for Vegas and Disney. The puff will regains it's loft when you put the shirt back through the oven. This gives a textured reflection vs the mirror look of flat. Applying foil by hand after a flashed gel will maintain mirror and provide dimension to the print. Here is a link to a newsletter I wrote on how we did this. Combine with discharge, wb, or foil resist for color + foil.http://murakamiscreen.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/3D-Puff-foils.pdfThe mesh used for the foil adhesive on top of the glue needs to be coarser than you would think. By using a 60-86-110 depending on details the glue will melt in the oven and flow around the puff ink to cover it completely. Taking the texture art to bitmap and using threshold in PS provides excellent black white texture images from a lot of the stock textures in PS. Size of the texture is important. Small details will merge, large details won't accept the foil correctly. A 50/50 mix of ink to shirt keeps the valleys of the texture open. The glue image was often a solid print over the puff. We used Insta Graphic presses, they seemed to provide consistent pressure with their floating head design. Pressure was as low as we could put it and still get coverage. We also used thicker EOM on both the puff and glue, 20-30%. Cap film would have helped looking back. One other key is foiling on puff inks is much better when you foil while the shirt is hot right out of the oven. Once the print is cold the foiling is inconsistent. We had an extended oven belt at the end and 4 heat presses next to the belt so one person could operate 2 foil presses. This all my company ever printed! We did discharge puff foil for Disney and others, much easier than it sounds.Al