News
The Best Way to Register Water-Based and Plastisol Screen Prints
How to Use a PMS Mixing System to Mix Custom Gray Ink Colors
How to Achieve Matte or Glossy Screen Prints
Curable Reducer, Soft Hand Additive, Extender Base: What’s the Difference?
4 Ways to Screen Print White Plastisol Ink on a White Shirt
Unlock Specialty Printing with 7 New Inks from FN-INKâ„¢
Add a Sparkle or Chrome Effect to Screen Prints with FN-INKâ„¢ Metallic Silver Plastisol Ink
Add Some Sparkle to Your Prints with FN-INKâ„¢ Gold
Take Your Prints to the Third Dimension with FN-INKâ„¢ Puff
Sometimes, a client may want their design to take on a whole new level. They want their message to stand out from the rest, to jump out at the viewer. You could make that happen by making a stellar design, choosing a loud color combo, etc. Or, you can literally elevate the print by using a puff additive.Â
Puff prints are so cool, but there are a few tips and tricks you’ll need to know to make a solid, lofted print. So, what do you need to know? Let’s find out.
The Best Practices to Make a Print Shimmer with FN-INKâ„¢ Pearl
Don’t Worry, Be Stretchy: Introducing FN-INK™ Stretch Plastisol Ink
Once in a while, you may receive an order where the print needs to be real flexible like it can stretch far without falling apart. All ink can stretch, to a point. When it needs more support to make it extra pliable, then you need stretch ink.
A stretch ink makes an ink more flexible so it resists cracking or splitting on stretchy garments like spandex, leggings, and yoga pants. FN-INK™ Stretch is designed to be used as either an underbase, mixed in with a base white, or as an additive for colors that need even more pliability. Let’s look at when and how you’d use the stretch ink in production.