all you will need is regular plastisol ink, transfer paper and transfer adhesive and you are good to go. If you have more questions you can feel free to give us a call or email support at Ryonet.com
the problem with using halftones is that when you press the image to the shirt the ink will often soften and spread out a bit which can comprimise the integrity of an image that is relying on the halftone for clarity.
This seems great when you're on a limited budget and don't have alot of space to store hundred or thousands of stock design shirts until they sell. However, with my design style I like to use half tones ALOT to create certain effects, but the guy in the video said to avoid using them with this technique. Why?
@TeamNastyClothing If you're printing something that you might print over and over again that needs stock, but you don't want to print 100 shirts. You just print the transfers, then when you get a order you transfer it to a blank shirt. This way you can keep blank shirt stock with out ruining them. Example if you have a shirt design that doesn't sell. Well then you won't waste your money by printing up shirts that never sold.
@TeamNastyClothing there are many time sthat I wish I had the ability to just carry blanks and print on demand. I sell my own apparel brand at disc golf tournaments and instead of carrying 3-4 boxes of already printed stuff I could carry just 1 box and print on demand whatever design they wanted. It woudl cut down on unsold inventory as well.
You can do this with just a flash but it will take a littel longer and you want to make sure that you have a laser temp gun so that you can be sure you get a full cure.
Very cool! Question though. What if I don't have a conveyor dryer? Can I still do this? I have everything else. Flash dryer, 4 color press, ext. Thank you.
hi, the song playing in your video, what band is that?
portraitphenomenon 1 week ago
yes this can be done with a flash
ryocobb 2 months ago
all you will need is regular plastisol ink, transfer paper and transfer adhesive and you are good to go. If you have more questions you can feel free to give us a call or email support at Ryonet.com
ryocobb 2 months ago
can I get a list of the materials that I need to print these transfers?
rocknrobbie 2 months ago
Can this process be done using a flash curing unit? as I do not have a convayer dryer.
Thank you
rocknrobbie 2 months ago
thanx for this great video!!!!
javierymirna 2 months ago
the problem with using halftones is that when you press the image to the shirt the ink will often soften and spread out a bit which can comprimise the integrity of an image that is relying on the halftone for clarity.
Ryonet 7 months ago
This seems great when you're on a limited budget and don't have alot of space to store hundred or thousands of stock design shirts until they sell. However, with my design style I like to use half tones ALOT to create certain effects, but the guy in the video said to avoid using them with this technique. Why?
EHM0341 7 months ago
Any companies that will make these in bulk?
shogun3001 8 months ago
why not just screen print the t-shirt?
TeamNastyClothing 8 months ago
@TeamNastyClothing transfers are great for event print, names and numbers, and athletics
Ryonet 8 months ago
@TeamNastyClothing If you're printing something that you might print over and over again that needs stock, but you don't want to print 100 shirts. You just print the transfers, then when you get a order you transfer it to a blank shirt. This way you can keep blank shirt stock with out ruining them. Example if you have a shirt design that doesn't sell. Well then you won't waste your money by printing up shirts that never sold.
zynthesis 7 months ago
@TeamNastyClothing there are many time sthat I wish I had the ability to just carry blanks and print on demand. I sell my own apparel brand at disc golf tournaments and instead of carrying 3-4 boxes of already printed stuff I could carry just 1 box and print on demand whatever design they wanted. It woudl cut down on unsold inventory as well.
Greatzky2 4 weeks ago
Great vid
msdominique74 9 months ago
Very cool! I look forward to trying them. Thanks for the great video!!
theruffside 9 months ago
that 15 seconds was the longest 15 seconds of my life. lol
kaykoyasuddin 9 months ago
You can do this with just a flash but it will take a littel longer and you want to make sure that you have a laser temp gun so that you can be sure you get a full cure.
Ryonet 9 months ago
Very cool! Question though. What if I don't have a conveyor dryer? Can I still do this? I have everything else. Flash dryer, 4 color press, ext. Thank you.
mikepriori1 9 months ago
Good stuff
pukingdeserthobo 9 months ago