"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I think this has been mentioned before but I don't remember the solution.We printed on light green 100% polyester shirts in white and the print on the back is showing throught the front.Could be not cooking the shirts after the dryer?Bleeding?
We had that problem as well. You can send all the garments through the dryer before printing to get rid of some of that extra sublimation ink that is leftover from the production process. Or what we do is use a base blocker. You put it down first and it blocks any sublimation that may happen during the drying process.
I did a test with Rutland Grey barrier base and it did not show through the back.I’m reprinting today with a grey base.
Quote from: Maxie on September 25, 2019, 05:37:59 AMI think this has been mentioned before but I don't remember the solution.We printed on light green 100% polyester shirts in white and the print on the back is showing throught the front.Could be not cooking the shirts after the dryer?Bleeding?we have had that happen before - the polywhite that we were using had peroxides in it and were "bleaching" (maybe theres a better term for it) the shirts when they were stacked. your ink manufacturer (or someone on TSB) could point you to a non bleaching polywhite ink.
That sounds like reverse ghosting?! Wow, never heard of that happening before, but you're saying it's transferring to from front to back, vs. from one shirt to another within a stack? I'm only chiming in late because someone mentioned different stacks. We typically stack our poly in 3 stacks at the end of the dryer in a rotating basis. By the time you you "go around the loop" the top shirt that is getting covered is already cool to the touch. This eliminated the hot stacks for us. Also are using the Rutland barrier grey, so typically just being extra safe as we print a lot of poly and have been burned by migration too many times in the past.