 So this specific process is going to deal with exposing a positive image to the screen that then rents out, which then pulls ink through the open areas. So right here you can see this design that I've exposed. So I'm going to show you a little bit of what I'm going to show you. I'm going to show you a little bit of what I'm going to show you. Right here you can see this design that I've exposed into my screen. I printed off a transparency computer of the design that I created in Illustrator, which I then exposed on the exposure unit. I'm going to be doing a blend. A lot of times it's referred to as a rainbow or a fountain blend, but I just like to call it a blend bead. The bead refers to the ink that I will be working with while I'm pushing and pulling through the screen. They will start to blend and become more seamless. Right now I'm just getting them laid out and then I will go in and kind of speed up the process and I'll mix the colors where they overlap ahead of time and then I'll start moving it around and you can kind of see it as it starts to smooth out. I'm doing this away from my open area on the screen because I don't want ink to go into that area yet. I'm going to begin by flooding the screen. Flooding refers to filling the open areas of the screen with ink and then followed by a hole which, or push, it pulls ink through the screen and onto the paper. And it's important that in between each print that I keep the screen flooded because then I'm keeping it consistent wet, pulling through the open areas so that ink doesn't dry because we're working with acrylic that tends to dry really quickly. And the rig that I have all this setup on is a vacuum base. Vacuum bases work really well for keeping your paper in the same spot. And the vacuum base has a series of holes on it and creates a suction so that your paper doesn't slip when you're doing the rig through the process.