Im still somewhat new to latex printing, but I have an HP 560 and we've been printing a lot of fabric for a company that manufactures custom sound absorption panels. (It's kind of like printing canvases that are going to be stretched on 2in deep frames, with the largest standard size being close to 4x8')
Im trying to plan for the future and thinking that I'll eventually need to buy a dedicated printer for printing on fabric.
I've been trying to research, but I'm still a little confused on the basics of textile printing.
What's the difference between dye-sub and DTG other than DTG is printing directly onto the fabric?
Is DTG specifically referring to printing on ready-made garments (like the Epson F2100)?
Are there good options for printers that print directly onto rolls of fabric that aren't ultra wide format?
Does anyone have any tips/tricks/resources for washing/reusing/buying more of the ink collector pads that go in the HP ink collector platten?
While I can foresee needing a dedicated printer for fabric, I think it would be a long time before I could also justify the price for a heat press that would be able handle the size of some of the pieces that we're printing.
Im trying to plan for the future and thinking that I'll eventually need to buy a dedicated printer for printing on fabric.
I've been trying to research, but I'm still a little confused on the basics of textile printing.
What's the difference between dye-sub and DTG other than DTG is printing directly onto the fabric?
Is DTG specifically referring to printing on ready-made garments (like the Epson F2100)?
Are there good options for printers that print directly onto rolls of fabric that aren't ultra wide format?
Does anyone have any tips/tricks/resources for washing/reusing/buying more of the ink collector pads that go in the HP ink collector platten?
While I can foresee needing a dedicated printer for fabric, I think it would be a long time before I could also justify the price for a heat press that would be able handle the size of some of the pieces that we're printing.