Today I’m going to attempt a real screen printing. I’ve selected an image from Daltokyo by Gary Panter — the first drawring from the first strip.
I’m printing on a black shirt, and the drawing is with black lines on a white background. So I can’t really print the lines themselves, but I have to print the white background instead, so I have to create an inverted print on the transparency. (It’s very confusing.)
Side note to summarise a bit what I’ve done wrong so far. And hopefully learned a bit from:
1) There’s a huge difference in transparency quality. I’ve bought three different “normal” transparencies (often called “overhead transparencies” or “OHP”), and they’re all too “pebbly” to be used for much of anything. That is, they’re very coarse, so you get a very uneven distribution of ink. In other words, you get a lot of white spots where you want total blackness.
2) All inkjet printers aren’t created equal. The first one I had, an HP Officejet, printed out quite badly onto transparencies and other plastics. Most people who do stuff like this seem to prefer Epson printers, so I got one of those, and it works perfectly.
3) There are different types of squeegees, and if you use a squeegee that’s not meant for printing onto clothes, it’ll be a lot more difficult to get a good result.
4) You need lighting to expose the emulsion. Look at my professional-looking new rig:
So here we go. Exposure. The chart says 16 minutes for 250W and 74 minutes for 105W, so 2x “150W-ish” should be… 35 minutes?… At 40 centimeters.
My squeegee action isn’t perfect yet. I pushed too much ink through on the right there. Probably because I’m right-handed…
Anyway, if you know what you’re doing (and I’m vaguely starting to), and you have all the right equipment, the turnaround on screen printing is just a few hours. It’s kinda fun and it looks nice once you get the hang of it.
IT”S WORTH IT!!! PLEASE LET IT BE WORHT IT!!!!!1!ONE!!