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thanks for sharing your ideas!
Sincerely, FRUSTRATION.
Pictures:
If your fabric was loose enough that you had to pull it around to make it tight enough to draw on, it wasn't tight enough overall to get a good print from it. You need your mesh to be as close to immovable as possible, so it holds the image in place when you draw your ink over it with your squeegee or what have you.
When I first started hobby screen printing, I made wooden rectangular frames and stretched old sheer curtain material over them, attaching it with a staple gun to get it as tight as possible. Works great for average detail designs and I still do this for one-off prints when I have t-shirt parties for my friends - it might give you better tension than an embroidery frame if you can't get it tight enough. :)
Don't give up! Screen printing is tons of fun!
Try using a higher count mesh for thinner lines and small lettering. 250 or 300 should be good.
On my 4th design, I love that it's simple and interchangeable, I can make multiple screens but only need a few hoops. I just have to remount them in the hoop when I want to use them, so I only need to store my loose fabric 'screens' rather than tons of wood frames.