"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Also if doing wet on wet spot colours you dont want a thick underbase. We single stroke the underbase so the spot colours dont pick up as much. Still achievable, is the bright smooth colours you want. The underbase must not be very thick to achieve this. Do a top white with all the colours flashed print to hitting it for a perfectly smooth white.
smoothing screen...end of story.
OK.... so a lot of good food for thought here. What I got out of it is this - Try the ink that Flo recommends, use a smoothing screen after flash and in the words of Frog... quit "Cheaping Out" and use a hilite white screen instead of the dbl hit base. Thank you all for taking the time to help me out. LarryK
Quote from: ffokazak on November 07, 2018, 06:22:19 PMAlso if doing wet on wet spot colours you dont want a thick underbase. We single stroke the underbase so the spot colours dont pick up as much. Still achievable, is the bright smooth colours you want. The underbase must not be very thick to achieve this. Do a top white with all the colours flashed print to hitting it for a perfectly smooth white.huh? how does the thickness of the underbase impact the top colors? pierre
I’m right in the middle of the learning curve on auto for fleece but here’s what I’ll add:- flashing! Turn it downnnn. They flash super quick which caused reg problems for us. And it could be leading to the roughness and fibrillation you’re seeing. - all the comments about off-contact are spot on. Hoodies are way thicker and softer so adjustment is needed. Once we figured out the flash and off-contact we were cruising on fleece. Too bad I bought a Roq and can’t do the damn sleeves next though. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk