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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

how to print Silk-screen manually

how to print Silk-screen manually

INTRODUCTION



There are 5 basic steps  to photo screen making and  printing:

1. Artwork Preparation
2. Coating the Screen
3. Exposing the Screen
4. Developing the Screen
5. Printing



This  manual will  guide you  through the 5 steps  with  graphic representations and descriptions. Before work is begun, however, you  will  need  to prepare the necessary materials for silk  screening.

Necessary Materials For  Silk  Screening

* Screen, 2” larger on each  side  than  artwork to be screened (Always coordinate mesh size  to  ink requirements)
* Squeegee, 1” smaller than  inside screen dimensions
* Ink (Choose according to printing surface and  desired qualities) Photo Emulsion and  Sensitizer
Tape  (see  TAPING THE SCREEN for type  you  need): Paper, Plastic or Masking
Newspapers
Household Bleach
Household Hydrogen Peroxide
Scrub Brush, Soft  Bristle
Bulb  – Preferably a 150 Watt  Flood Bulb
Measuring Cup
Old  Rags  or Towels (Paper or Cloth)
A Piece of Glass Large Enough to Support the Screen and Allow for Propping on
Both  Sides Without Interference With  the Light Source
Spatula – Approximately 1”
Cardboard – Pieces Cut  to About 3” x 6” (For  Ink Cleanup)
Opaque Marker, Technical Pen  (Use  Ink For Plastic Sheets), Graphic Arts  Tape, India Ink,  Ruby Film, and  Stencil Knife (see  ARTWORK PREPARATION for full description of choices)
For Multicolor Work Only, Registration Pins  and  a Standard 1/4”  diameter hole puncher
For Multicolor Textile Printing Only  – Eye  Bolts, L-Angles, wood for Contact Bar and  Platen (See  “T”   Shirt Platen)




ARTWORK PREPARATION



The  first  and  most  important step  in successful screen making is artwork preparation. In photo screen making and  screen printing all the steps  that  follow artwork preparation depend on accurate duplication of your  design. In order to render the exact image you  want  it is absolutely necessary for your  artwork to be opaque. Opaque artwork means you  cannot see light  through the areas of your  artwork that  you  want  to print. Hold  your  artwork up to the light  and  check this  to insure no light  shows through the areas you  darkened. It is very  helpful to check opacity on a light box.

The  opacity of your  artwork is crucial to obtaining a clean well  defined stencil. The
artwork you  create will  become part  of the screen and  this  is called a stencil. The  opaque materials you  use to create your  artwork will  stop  the light  from  getting to the photo emulsion, which will  be coated onto  the screen, and  when you  shoot the screen the light  will  not be able  to penetrate the opaque materials. If light  does  not get to the photo emulsion, it will  not harden in that  area.  When the screen is developed or washed out,  the parts  that  were  not exposed to light  will  wash out.  Later during printing, the ink will  pass  through these undeveloped or washed out areas in the screen and the ink will  print  the exact image of your  design.

Basically there  are many different materials that  can be used  to prepare artwork for a photo screen, however they  must  all be opaque mediums and  they  must  work on clear  acetate or clear polyester (plastic sheets). Materials such  as

India Ink
Red  Ruby Masking Ink
Ink  For Acetate Pressure-sensitive Lettering Dry  Transfer Lettering
Opaque Markers That Work On Any  Surface
Technical Pens Graphic Art Tapes Ruby Tape
Ruby or Amber Film Shading Film  Stencil Knife

Actually any  material that  will  filter  out ultra  violet light  will  work to create a photo screen because ultra  violet light  causes the photo emulsion to cross link  and  become a waterproof coating or stencil.




Creating Artwork.



Making Monocolor Artwork

To make artwork, simply tape  your  drawing down to the table  and  tape  a sheet of acetate over  it. Now  you  can trace  your  image with  any  of the opaque mediums mentioned. You  can also create directly on the acetate without tracing. If you  choose to make words, you  will  need  a grid sheet or piece of paper with  horizontal lines  that  are straight so your  lettering can be transferred to the plastic sheet in a uniform patter (See  Diagram). Burnish the transfer lettering directly onto  the acetate but be sure  to put clear  Scotch tape  over  it when you  are finished so the letters will  not
chip  or peel  while you  are handling or storing the sheet.




Making Multicolor Artwork

When making multicolor artwork, exact overlaying of colors is crucial to render a print  that will  not have  spaces between colors. This  is called registration of colors. Overlapping of colors is called trapping and  is crucial to good  registration. Good traps  mean less  difficulty in registering one color to another when printing. All the colors that  are supposed to meet  or touch each  other will fall in the right  places in your  design.

To make a good  trap,  the light  colors should extend slightly into  the dark  colors. When printing, the light  colors are printed first  and  the dark  colors are printed over  them, thus  reducing the overlap and  rendering the exact size  of the color shape in your  artwork. Therefore, each  acetate will  contain a separate color. The  size  of the overlap depends upon  the width of the adjacent or outline color. When an entire pattern is covered by an outline which pulls  the images together, the underlying colors must  overlap into  the outlined area  but not surpass the outline.








First, analyze the number of colors in your  design and  note  where each  color appears in the entire image. Each  color will  need  a separate acetate or clear  polyester sheet.

To make multicolor artwork, you  will  need  registration pins,  a 1/4”  diameter hole  puncher and  a separate acetate or clear  polyester sheet for each  color. Before any  work has begun, gather the sheets together and  punch a hole  in the upper right  hand  corner, at least  2” above your  artwork, and  insert a registration pin.  Now  punch a hole  in the upper left hand  corner and  insert another registration pin (See  Diagram).

Tape  the pins  to the drawing board or a table  and  remove the plastic or acetate sheets. Tape your  artwork to the board and  place the first  acetate on the registration pins.  Using a marker, technical pen  or other opaque medium, trace  the first  color of your  design. When finished, remove the acetate and  replace with  the next  acetate. Trace the next  color. Continue this  process until  all the colors are traced on separate acetates (See  Diagram).

After you  separate all the colors (this  would include the outline that  pulls  the design together, if your  artwork calls  for an outline) place all acetates on the registration pins  with  the overall outline on top. Your overall outline or pattern that  brings the design together as a whole should not show spaces between colors when you  hold  the acetates up to the light. It may  help  to work on a light  box.









Summary

1.     Analyze the number of colors in your  design.

2.     Use  a separate acetate for each  color.

3.     Register all acetates simultaneously to each  other by punching holes in the plastic sheets with a 1/4”  diameter standard hole  puncher and  insert pins.  Punch the first  hole  and  insert the pin before punching the second hole  and  inserting the pin.

4.     Tape  the artwork to the drawing board. Tape  the registration pins  2” above the artwork.

5.     Place the first  acetate on the pins  and  copy  the first  color with  an opaque medium. Remove the acetate when completed.

6.     Place the next  acetate on the pins  and  copy  the next  color. Remove this  acetate and  continue until  all colors are separated.

7.     When colors meet, trap  light  colors by extending them  beyond the original artwork and  into the darker or neighboring colors. However, the overall outline color that  pulls  the image together should not be surpassed. This  master or outline color should bring the extended colors back  down to their  original shape and  fit perfect as in the original artwork.



Important Things to Remember

Proportion your  artwork according to the space you  are printing on. For example children’s “T”  shirts have  a smaller print  area  than  adult  “T”  shirts and  your  artwork should be reduced to fit that  space. When printing on paper you  may  want  to leave a border around the edges of the paper. Do not print  to the end  of the paper stock, because the image will  not print  clearly. (Also, you  will not be able  to pick  the paper up without getting ink on your  fingers!)

Opaque Areas in your  artwork or areas you  cannot see through will  print. Light will  not pass through opaque artwork and  the photo emulsion will  not cross link  during exposure time. These areas will  wash out when you  develop the screen and  while you  are printing; the ink will  pass through these washed out areas and  onto  your  stock.

Transparent Areas around your  artwork or areas you  can  see through will  not print. Light will pass  through the transparent or blank areas around your  artwork and  expose the photo emulsion causing a chemical cross linking that  will  harden around your  artwork. Your artwork will actually be formed by this  process and  become part  of the screen stencil.








Positives and  Negatives

What are positives and  negatives? Generally speaking, a positive is the image that  is not part  of the background. A negative is the background which is printed to create the image.

For example, in the images below, the cash  register’s shape or form  is outlined and  thus defined as a positive picture of the object. The  apple and  witch are also  positive images that  will print  as they  are drawn.

The  SOS  and  the globe are defined or shaped by the areas around them  and  they  are negative representations of the objects. The  opaque areas that  surround the SOS  and  the globe are the parts  that  will  print. Notice, the continents on the globe are positive images on the negative globe. The  transparent areas which are the images shaped or formed by the background will  not print. Ink  will  only  pass  through opaque areas in the artwork.

Film  positives and  film  negatives can be made by using a process camera and
photographic artwork which is in black and  white and  on paper. These work the same way  as hand made positives and  negatives and  print  as stated above.

It is important to keep  in mind the qualities of the ink you  are using and  the substrate you intend to print  on when making positives and  negatives. Some inks  dry slowly and  large  deposits of ink will  take  long  to dry.  This  may  affect the amount of time  it takes to complete a project as well  as what  difficulties a specific design may  introduce.






COATING THE SCREEN

Preparation

Once you  make your  artwork, the next  step  in the process is coating the screen. It is very important to wash the screen mesh to remove all sizing before you  apply the photo emulsion. If there  is oil on a mesh from  your  skin  or from  handling in the factory where the screen was  made, this  oil will  repel  the photo emulsion and  you  will  have  spaces in the coating which will  ultimately become unwanted open  areas in the screen. When it comes time  to print, ink will  flow  through these open  areas and  be deposited on the stock.




Using your  scrub brush, gently scrub the screen with  soap  and  water and  rinse. Then with  an abrasive cleanser, one  which does  not contain bleach, such  as Bonami, gently scrub the screen again. Be sure  to rinse  thoroughly. Allow the screen
to dry completely (a fan will  greatly decrease drying time). Now  your  screen will  be more absorbent and the photo emulsion will  better adhere to the mesh.

Photo Emulsion

Working in a dimly lit area,  mix  4 parts photo emulsion to 1 part  sensitizer. For example, 4 ounces emulsion with  1 part  sensitizer. Once mixed, this  solution is light  sensitive with  a short  shelf  life. Measure small amounts to prevent wastage. The amount of photo emulsion and  sensitizer you  will need  will  depend upon  the size  of the screen you  are using. Stir  this  mixture carefully to prevent air bubbles and  allow mixture to stand for about 10 minutes. It is best  to work in very  dim  daylight or use an amber bulb  because it is bright but will  not affect the chemistry of the photo emulsion.


Store excess photo emulsion and  sensitizer mixture in a plastic or glass  container at room temperature. Be sure  to store  in a darkened area.  This  mixture is good  for 3 to 4 days  at room temperature and  slightly longer if refrigerated. (If storing in refrigerator, use an opaque container which will  not allow light  to expose the photo emulsion.)

Expose the screen and  develop within seven hours after  coating it. If you  need  more time, it can still  be exposed up to 24 hours after  coating the screen. However, the screen must  be stored in a dark  area  until  you  are ready to expose it. Save  the extra  mixture to fill pinholes after  the screen has been  developed but again keep  it in a dark  area.  CAUTION: Never use photo emulsion on screens made with  pure  silk  fabric mesh.




Reclaiming the Screen or Removing the Photo Emulsion

After printing, many screeners prefer to leave the image on the screen for future use.  If you  wish  to do so, your  screen can be stored indefinitely. If however, you  choose to remove the image from  the screen follow these simple steps:

1.     Remove all excess ink and  return it to the container.

2.     To clean the screen, follow the instructions on the ink can label. For instance, if using water based ink,  clean screen with  water. If using oil based inks,  clean screens with  screen wash. It
is very  important to get all the ink out of the screen before reclaiming. Any  remaining ink will interfere with  the chemistry needed to remove the emulsion.

3.     Fill a tray  or a tub that  is larger than  the screen with  household bleach. Cover the mesh completely. Wait  5 to 10 minutes.

4.     With  a soft  scrub brush, gently rub both  sides  of the fabric.

5.     Stand screen up and  sprinkle or spray hydrogen peroxide on both  sides. This  will  create a foaming action. Scrub both  sides  gently and  wait  5 to 10 minutes.

6.     Using hot water, preferably with  a spray hose, wash the screen.

7.     When the screen is thoroughly rinsed, allow it to dry completely and  it will  be ready for reuse.

If needed, the process may  be repeated.








Applying the Photo Emulsion

After mixing the photo emulsion and  sensitizer in the exact proportions needed, and allowing the mixture to sit for about 10 minutes, follow the three  steps  illustrated below.








1. Turn  screen to outside and  pour  a sufficient amount of the mixture along the narrow side of the screen.




2. In a scraping action, use a coating bar or squeegee to spread the mixture smoothly over  the entire length of the screen. Scrape coat  outside of screen.




3. For a more durable screen, turn  over  and scrape coat  the inside of the screen from bottom to top. Turn  over  and  scrape coat inside of screen.




4. Turning to the outside of the screen, repeat the process but do not add  more photo emulsion unless there  are streaks and  empty spaces.




5. Always apply final  coat  to the inside of the screen.






Scrape away excess emulsion and  return excess to the container. Do not leave a heavy deposit of emulsion on the screen. Apply even  coats. Do not leave lumps or streaks on the screen. Be sure  the screen that  has been  coated does  not come in contact with  anything that  will  disturb its smooth coat.











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