Printing on glass using screenprinting:
There are kinds of ink which attach to glass nicely, even paper-ink.
However, try to put it in a bucket filled with water and see if the next day you picture is still on the glass.
For quite a while we used a well-looking ink on a glass, but when we tried the water-test when a supplier told us, and I was in shock.. Lucky for us it was an indoor purpose...
this is the way to get it fixed
1-find the glass-topside by dripping water on it. Use the side where the drop spreads best.
2-screenprint with 2-component inkt (e.g. TCI8700 ink with glass-hardener)
3 -heat it up to 140 deg half an hour (if the object fits in your oven) .
The above gives the best results as far as I know.
Better is to use ceramic ink, but than you need a special oven (high temp)
By the way I do not know how UV ink attaches to glass (and if it can withstand washing machines). We simply never tried, and we do not have a flatbed printer (yet)
There are kinds of ink which attach to glass nicely, even paper-ink.
However, try to put it in a bucket filled with water and see if the next day you picture is still on the glass.
For quite a while we used a well-looking ink on a glass, but when we tried the water-test when a supplier told us, and I was in shock.. Lucky for us it was an indoor purpose...
this is the way to get it fixed
1-find the glass-topside by dripping water on it. Use the side where the drop spreads best.
2-screenprint with 2-component inkt (e.g. TCI8700 ink with glass-hardener)
3 -heat it up to 140 deg half an hour (if the object fits in your oven) .
The above gives the best results as far as I know.
Better is to use ceramic ink, but than you need a special oven (high temp)
By the way I do not know how UV ink attaches to glass (and if it can withstand washing machines). We simply never tried, and we do not have a flatbed printer (yet)