"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
You will want to test different percentages of discharge agent on the garments. Too much or not enough will change the brightness. I know people have beaten the " you need a good scale accurate scale" horse but it is true. Document the percentages accurately so that you can establish baselines to work with on future jobs. It will help you with consistency on reorders as well. Just being a little off goes a long way.
Maybe ill continue to go rouge...
If the sample shirts you received look anything like the picture you posted then something is wrong with the samples.The picture posted is 70 base/30 white correct? (or thereabouts seeing as you don't have a scale) That mixis usually used for UB (actually 80/20) and will give a tannish color as seen in your pic, depending on garment. Reverse the base/white,print correctly, and you should have a truly bright white whose hand and overall appearance will be far more desirable than plastisolto %99 of clients.Get a scale. It's like a carpenter not having a hammer.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on January 23, 2013, 03:22:37 PM Maybe ill continue to go rouge... Rouge = french for red.Rogue = shows an undesirable variation from a standard...just saying
Quote from: ebscreen on January 23, 2013, 03:36:59 PMIf the sample shirts you received look anything like the picture you posted then something is wrong with the samples.The picture posted is 70 base/30 white correct? (or thereabouts seeing as you don't have a scale) That mixis usually used for UB (actually 80/20) and will give a tannish color as seen in your pic, depending on garment. Reverse the base/white,print correctly, and you should have a truly bright white whose hand and overall appearance will be far more desirable than plastisolto %99 of clients.Get a scale. It's like a carpenter not having a hammer.The samples I posted (as noted when posted), were our second try which was 70/30 then variations of that, first try was white with activator only which no picture was posted since I forgot to take a picture and the shirt is at home since we washed it, and it looks similar to the samples I received from Alan and Nick. Yes the sample pictures posted here were more natural/tarnished color which I expected. But it was slightly different than I expected as well and I also expected brighter white out of the straight white (not posted), as I have made clear my expectations were probably too high. After getting the samples from Nick and Alan ive confirmed that. My white print looked similar to their white prints I clearly had the expectations too high for how bright it would be since I am sure they do know what they are doing. Reality is right now I don't need a scale since it is likely we will not do any more discharge at least not until we hire another person. We don't have any extra time for the extra steps required to do discharge as illustrated by the fact it took us like 3 months to try this twice, but I got a good set of samples and I already know I am close. Just a matter of tweaking it when time is right if ever.
Quote from: Inkworks on January 23, 2013, 03:25:47 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on January 23, 2013, 03:22:37 PM Maybe ill continue to go rouge... Rouge = french for red.Rogue = shows an undesirable variation from a standard...just saying His keyboard just can't keep up. I've been working on an over clocked keyboard that can handle his typing speed but so far it's only resulted in some melted keys (more than normal that is).
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on January 23, 2013, 04:20:55 PMQuote from: ebscreen on January 23, 2013, 03:36:59 PMIf the sample shirts you received look anything like the picture you posted then something is wrong with the samples.The picture posted is 70 base/30 white correct? (or thereabouts seeing as you don't have a scale) That mixis usually used for UB (actually 80/20) and will give a tannish color as seen in your pic, depending on garment. Reverse the base/white,print correctly, and you should have a truly bright white whose hand and overall appearance will be far more desirable than plastisolto %99 of clients.Get a scale. It's like a carpenter not having a hammer.The samples I posted (as noted when posted), were our second try which was 70/30 then variations of that, first try was white with activator only which no picture was posted since I forgot to take a picture and the shirt is at home since we washed it, and it looks similar to the samples I received from Alan and Nick. Yes the sample pictures posted here were more natural/tarnished color which I expected. But it was slightly different than I expected as well and I also expected brighter white out of the straight white (not posted), as I have made clear my expectations were probably too high. After getting the samples from Nick and Alan ive confirmed that. My white print looked similar to their white prints I clearly had the expectations too high for how bright it would be since I am sure they do know what they are doing. Reality is right now I don't need a scale since it is likely we will not do any more discharge at least not until we hire another person. We don't have any extra time for the extra steps required to do discharge as illustrated by the fact it took us like 3 months to try this twice, but I got a good set of samples and I already know I am close. Just a matter of tweaking it when time is right if ever. Glad you got the samples i sent, and it sounds like what i was thinking was right. some people just wont go for the discharge, no matter how nice and soft it feels, because the white just cant get as bright white like a good plastisol. some jobs, and some customers, are going to be ok with it, and once you get the hang of it, it certainly becomes easier and faster to print, but there will still be customers that just want that bright, thick, heavy, super bright white that you can only get from plastisol. we have one customer that specifically states, they want heavy thick, thicker the better, white plastisol prints because, in their opinion, thicker ink is better.anyway, glad you got the shirts and hope they help you gettin things figured out if and when you do decide to give it a shot.
Rouge=ShellyRogue=BrandtSorry couldn't resist