guymark
Printing Ninja
Well, while having a go at making my own spooling roller with tensioning arm for trying to print non-paper backed material, I ended up winning a proper bit of kit for (I think) about £49 + carriage. Still going to finish my home brew effort BUT I wanted to have a play with the bit of kit I won too.
So although not *quite* what I wanted for tensioning, this evening I had another go at printing polycotton sheet.
It wasn't amazing - but it wasn't awful either.
The takeup roller managed to keep the tension about right with some tweaking (variable clutch, adjusted by screwing a knob to tension an internal spring) - and, if the polycotton had been supplied on a roller to keep things nicely aligned, I think the middle 36 inches or so of a 44" print would have been almost spot on.
I should have taken a photo of it but I have already cut it into bits so I can chuck half of various test prints in with washing to see how the Inktec Ink holds up to 30c washing, 40c washing and 60c washing. I am not expecting the world, but if it can handle 20+ washes at 30c without too much fade, I think it will be suitable for printing custom jacket linings and "occasional use shirts / blouses" for creative friends. Some has already survived being hand washed at around 35c for around 40 minutes. ZERO detectable fade - though I would have been disappointed otherwise.
Now I now it sort of works, I am going to get a sensible amount of material on a roll - and then print my "test prints" with a selection of settings to try and work out the best ink density etc for polycotton and also pure cotton.
Probably never really going to make much use of this - but I find it fun making something perform a task that it was never meant to do. My only concern was the possibility of a head crash but the worst I had was a set of TINY wrinkles - didn't even spoil the printout - so although I watched it like a hawk, once the take up roller had a good grab, the tension was spot on and away it went.
I set the printer to "canvas", 1440dpi with fast mode "off" on the basis it might squirt in a bit of extra ink - but the colours were a BIT light. This may of course be partly to do with the fact that I was printing on polycotton - so only the cotton fibres would really take up the ink - that said, the cloth was dry to the touch by the time it came out of the printer.
This might be useless information really - but I guessed I might not be the only person who was wondering about whether a printer designed for paper could make a reasonable go at printing on regular thin material.
When I get the roll and get some decent sized prints, I will photo them and upload them if anyone is interested in the quality of the print.
So although not *quite* what I wanted for tensioning, this evening I had another go at printing polycotton sheet.
It wasn't amazing - but it wasn't awful either.
The takeup roller managed to keep the tension about right with some tweaking (variable clutch, adjusted by screwing a knob to tension an internal spring) - and, if the polycotton had been supplied on a roller to keep things nicely aligned, I think the middle 36 inches or so of a 44" print would have been almost spot on.
I should have taken a photo of it but I have already cut it into bits so I can chuck half of various test prints in with washing to see how the Inktec Ink holds up to 30c washing, 40c washing and 60c washing. I am not expecting the world, but if it can handle 20+ washes at 30c without too much fade, I think it will be suitable for printing custom jacket linings and "occasional use shirts / blouses" for creative friends. Some has already survived being hand washed at around 35c for around 40 minutes. ZERO detectable fade - though I would have been disappointed otherwise.
Now I now it sort of works, I am going to get a sensible amount of material on a roll - and then print my "test prints" with a selection of settings to try and work out the best ink density etc for polycotton and also pure cotton.
Probably never really going to make much use of this - but I find it fun making something perform a task that it was never meant to do. My only concern was the possibility of a head crash but the worst I had was a set of TINY wrinkles - didn't even spoil the printout - so although I watched it like a hawk, once the take up roller had a good grab, the tension was spot on and away it went.
I set the printer to "canvas", 1440dpi with fast mode "off" on the basis it might squirt in a bit of extra ink - but the colours were a BIT light. This may of course be partly to do with the fact that I was printing on polycotton - so only the cotton fibres would really take up the ink - that said, the cloth was dry to the touch by the time it came out of the printer.
This might be useless information really - but I guessed I might not be the only person who was wondering about whether a printer designed for paper could make a reasonable go at printing on regular thin material.
When I get the roll and get some decent sized prints, I will photo them and upload them if anyone is interested in the quality of the print.