"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
how long does it last once catalyzed?
been on my reps ass about this for months and i still havent got any samples.
Had the Nazdar rep stop by yesterday with a sample of their new product, silicone based ink. We printed some shirts while John was here and I have to admit the stuff is very impressive! It is super bright with no fuzz showing through; thin, very thin print even through a 110. The deposit stretches more than the garment so it was flexible and even the UA stuff could did not distort. No matter how much you stretched the fabric, it just went with it rather than staying solid the way plastisol does. It cures at 250 so there is no risk of bleeding (or so they say). The bad part is it does require a catalyst so since there will be waste, it will drive the costs up a little. Gallon (depending on the color) is in the $120-$150 range. The most impressive part is it prints and sheers better than most plastisols we use! One swipe through a 110 with our normal white ink settings and it printed perfect. It cleared without any ink left in the screen, not even the smallest amount. We tried P/F/P with one and two strokes and it did not benefit from multiple swipes. On some materials it might even work fine without flashing, but that will take a little bit of testing. The resulting print is so thin, that there is no ridge where the ink starts. The finish is rubbery and it is easy to tell where the deposit it, but other than that it is like there is nothing on the shirt. %-At a risk of promoting something that would normally give us a competitive edge, everybody should try it! soft print, stretchy, easy to print and no bleeding, need I say anything more?pierrep.s. no, Nazdar is not paying me to say this, the product really is that impressive. I've been telling one of our customers about it for a while and he thought I was crazy for being excited about it. He was here when we printed it and he is convert and is already ordering some shirts!
is this compatible with a pigment coloring system? I would consider replacing our current low cure, wfx epic performance, as this sounds a little better. but to keep costs down I would prefer a mixing system or better yet a set of high pigment rfu colors that you could mix and extend or simply print as is.250 is crazy low for cure temp, this stuff would be extremely useful for that alone.Sent from my intelligent phone-a-majigger.
Any funny smells with this? Being in a small space that is something I take note of. Sent from samsung gem(the worst smart phone ever)