Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I think we need a specific section intended for just critiquing prints. LOL.Dot-Tone art, Dot-Tone seps. 2 colors. White and Navy.230 mesh. 55lpi.Base two strokes flash, Navy one stroke.I'm getting kinda lucky in that the halftones are coming out as good as they are with the bulb exp unit.While the art is challenging in the center where you see a lot of banding, there are very thin halftone vertical lines intended to be in the print, along with some other textures. We did pretty good getting that in two colors. Adding to this pattern effect, is the screen mesh. It almost goes unnoticible and a customer might think it's part of the art intent.Not the garment or art. I've checked. I have this printed on a pellon as well and the exact same issue is shown in same areas. This would be of no issue if printing solid art or maybe even lower lpi like 45 or 35. As I go up in lpi, I see it more and more.I think a small part of it is the exposure. (this is 50lpi on 230). But some of this could be in the stretching as well. I've seen this a lot in my travels installing and exposing at shops all over. ALL of those issues were on static frames. Most times (if it's your mesh), it's most noticeable in the the low % tones. Here, it's noticeable at top left and right of the inside of the S. This goes across from 5% into the 40,60 and up to solid.I will review coating techniques (have't gotten to that yet), They prob did like they do on all screens and did a 2/1but I think it's more of a inconsistant stretch. We have a lot of mixed screens from different suppliers so it's too late to determine where it came from and I've only gotten 3 new screens from Spot Color ( to test out and haven't used yet) so It's not them.Does this look like mesh stretch issue to you all?
50lpi on a 230 should hold the detail just fine. Unless other factors were at play.