Hello. This is my first post so forgive me if I'm asking a newbie question. Anyway, I've been having trouble with color bleeding at work. When we're stuck with a garment that wasn't picked up, we'll routinely print a swash shape over the existing logo with 5 coats of white and then print on our company logo over top of that. On some garments, this works. On others, the existing logo will bleed through the swash shape but with the color of the garment rather than the original ink color. Today, we had a few sweatshirts(black) returned to us with a two color (red and white) front. The white looks like it has a red layer beneath it that is slowly bleeding through. We use plastisol inks, flash in between coats and send our garments through a dryer set to 850 degrees. It's looking like a problem with the white plastisol. Does anyone know why this would be happening? Thanks,
~Kevin
White Plastisol Bleed Problems
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Re: White Plastisol Bleed Problems
That sounds like it is Dye Migration. I assume the offending garment are either 50/50 or 100% poly. It that case the white you need to print is a Lo-Bleed poly white. It has blockers to stop the dye from migrating into the white ink. The heat causes the poly fibers to bleed out. Try curing at a lower temp for more time. That may help too. Here is the Lo bleed I use http://www.silkscreeningsupplies.com/si ... t/IC741LFG.
Re: White Plastisol Bleed Problems
Yeah, most common plastisols cure around 340 degrees or less. I would lower the dryer temp too!