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Screen Printing: Cheap, Dirty, and At Home

Step 6Print!

Print!
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Now that you've got a screen you are ready to print.

1. Mask the edges. The main weakness of these home screens is the edges. It's a good idea to put some masking tape along the edges of the screen before you start printing so you don't get any sloppy leaks off the sides.

2. Place your fabric on some papers to protect the surface underneath. If you're doing a t-shirt, put a piece of paper inside the shirt.

3. Put the screen down on your fabric, put some printing ink along the top of the screen, and pull it over the image with your art squeegie. If you can't afford a squeegie, use a piece of cardboard.

Be very careful not to let the screen move while you are printing. Hold it down firmly. You absolutely have to print on a good flat surface or you will get terrible results.

4. Lift the screen and admire your work. You rule!

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34 comments
Mar 28, 2012. 8:09 PMstinastar says:
I'm an art teacher with teenagers with no $$ available to us in this economy. I wonder if you know of a cheap way to make a class set of frames?Also approximately how long does it take for the screen to be out in the sunshine? 10 min, 10 hours -?
Apr 13, 2012. 7:06 AMJinxed_Girl2000 says:
I looked up other ways to screen print that may be more cost effective when first starting out. Here's one way to make your own screen for printing without having to buy a bunch of stuff and go through the hard work of using light to create a silkscreen.
First off, go to the dollar store and get a wooden picture frame or try walmart for the frame or see if they have embroidery hoops that are the correct size and are cheap. Then all you need is ink or fabric paint, sizzlers or razor blade to cut the design, paper, screen, tape, and a squeegie tool of some sort and something to print onto (T-shirt or whatever). http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/may/11/how-to-screen-print-tshirts-at-home
Jul 28, 2011. 9:37 PMbhusgen says:
Wow, this is great! I have been wanting to make tags for items that I sell, and I think that I'm going to try and pull this off---way less money than having them made, and I love to try new things!!!! Thanks sooooo much for the info and tips! Can't wait to try and convince my husband to let me do this!!
Nov 18, 2009. 10:14 PMlamaliepaard says:
Ms Tracy, thank you for this very detailed instructable!!! Every step went beautifully.  I bought the Speedball emulsion kit, and they suggest using a 150 watt lightbulb with a pie tin around it (if you buy a worklamp, you don't need the pie tin) set up 12" above the screen for 45 minutes.  Since it's been raining all day here, I tried that and it worked perfectly.  Thanks so much!
Oct 18, 2009. 11:09 PMstraightwhitelines says:
ok, i've been working on some screen printing this weekend and having alot more trouble than initially anticipated

the first time i think i just used too much emulsion, and I was trying to use a pretty junkie little flourescant light. The whole process was a flop.

this last time went to wal mart and got me one of those clip in lights with the reflector, and a 100 watt bulb. the print is only about 4" x 6" so I figured it that would be good enough. I need a piece of glass I now realize, cause the center was almost non exsistant after about an hour, but what really confused me is that when I went to wash it all off, the design remianed and the stuff around it was gone? what the crap? any advice?
Sep 10, 2009. 1:34 PMgarzat says:
Hi, im a little lost. I think that I am missing a step. How do you get the image you want onto the screen?
Feb 27, 2007. 4:35 AMOabbey says:
im so confused. if you're spreading paint on the whole square of fabric, how does just the design show up?
Sep 4, 2009. 7:27 PMelitescreenprinting says:
The emulsion covered by your image does not get cured by the sunlight and will wash out which allows the ink to push through. Once emulsion is exposed to the sunlight it hardens and cannot be removed from the screen without emulsion remover.<br/><br/><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.elitescreenprinting.com">Screen Printing</a><br/><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.elitescreenprinting.com">T Shirts</a><br/>
Jul 29, 2009. 10:38 AMdenacho says:
yeah, i think Oabbey might have been confused about which part gets rinsed off, the "field" or the photo. i always have to remind myself of that when i'm reading. so it's kinda like creating your own stencil on a screen instead of mylar. the "field" becomes the solid part that the paint can't get through and the photo is the part where the emulsion gets rinsed away and is the "hole" that the paint eventuall goes through. awesome step-by-step btw.
Feb 28, 2007. 6:50 PMWinxamitosis says:
Hi there. this is great! I have one question though. what would be the best way to try and do a multicoloured print? i also did this a long time ago at college, using their kit, but i'd like some ideas on matching up colours, or even overprinting. i'm geussing perhaps some registration marks or something would help, though obviously the point here is that we're trying to do this simply? anyone tried doing, say, 2 colours? A very handy, as they say in these parts, instructable. Cheers
Mar 10, 2009. 1:26 PMJazzyArt says:
Hey - love your tutorial! We're doing some thermalfax printing in my textiles class and for practice we printed on sturdy paper (think file folder paper) then used an exacto knife and cut out different parts of our design so we could later print the pieces of the design we cut out of the paper (the cut paper we called masks). I've seen the masking tape way of doing it and that just looks like it's very complicated and wasteful of masking tape. I love using masks because you can also print through a blank screen and the cut out mask to create a background in the same shape without detail. Thanks again for your tutorial! thought I would add what I know
Oct 20, 2008. 3:58 AMtrym300 says:
love this but i can't do it ive got a photo emulsion only and got NO SENSITIZER & ACTIVATOR got any alternatives on this...
Apr 15, 2008. 1:58 AMashwinsmommy says:
LOVE this!!!! Thanks for posting it!
Feb 22, 2008. 2:56 PMedwardian says:
Any advice please! Do I really have to go out and get some Acrylic Inks to print directly on to thick plain card or can I use Acrylic Paint I have in tubes to make up my colours?. A 250 ml container of Acrylic Printing Medium is included in a Screen Printing Kit I bought today, which was being sold off at local craft shop because it had a slight problem with the frame (which I have already sorted out) Some Screen Drawing Fluid and Removable screen block is also with this set. I haven't had chance yet to start printing yet but hope to start a a small project which requires printing a few different size blocks of colour onto thick plain white card. I thought asking this question to the forum might save me wasting some time and materials when I get chance to make a start next week. Thanks in advance for any replies. Edwardian. England
Jan 12, 2008. 1:38 PMlite1 says:
this very cool, here's my question-I want to silk screen an amplifier panel with numbers around the dials, text like 'bass' , 'treble' etc about 1/8" high, do you think I can get the resolution clear enough where all lettering will be sharp? thanks, any info would be appreciated
Sep 11, 2007. 9:42 AMcam_aro_man says:
when i used to screen print i found a product at wall-mart called textial medium. you just mixed it with acrilic paint and had some ink. because i had acrilic paint for other crafts i then had a plethera of collors to choose from. (make shure you heat set your ink though, use an iron with a scrap of fabric between the iron and the ink)
Jul 24, 2007. 11:59 PMneonblue2568 says:
This is a really great idea! I had not really thought about using pic frames for frames for screenprinting. I have been missing out and spending way more than I needed to for "fun" projects!!!
Jul 10, 2007. 11:03 PMfabricobsessed says:
um, i know this might be a stupid question, but can you re-use the same screen with a different image? Like, if you screenprinted a rose, and later, you want to screenprint a shoe, would you be able to wash off the hardened, burnt photo emulsion gunk? And if you use glue instead like some people do, do you know if you can wash that off? sorry, one more question, could you use pantyhose or tights instead of an old curtain or something? cause it's sheer, so i don't know if that would be the same as a slightly loose woven curtain. thank you!
May 29, 2007. 7:24 PMjnollsch says:
So I caved and bought a silk screen from Dick Blick, I guess I'm just a sucker for super well stocked art stores. Anyway, I was wondering if you're supposed to be able to get all of the ink of after each use, or if it's ok for some remnants of past designs to be stained onto the screen. Any thoughts Tracy?
May 29, 2007. 8:00 PMjnollsch says:
Yep, that's exactly what I mean, thanks.
May 17, 2007. 11:06 AMjoonatan15 says:
Instead of sunlight, I got two worklights at home that I expose my screens with. Exposure takes about 9 minuntes. The worklights cost about $10 each at Lowes. You just have to remove the uv-glass before you use them. If you want a cheap squeegee, utility floor cleaning squeegees are almost identical. they come wide and you can saw it down to the size you need. Easy registration for flat printing is to use a piece of transparency. First tape one side of transparency down. Then print on it and lift the screen up. You can position your piece of fabric or paper under the transparency where you want to print. Then flip the transparency out of the way and youre ready to print. This works good enough for me for multicolor prints. Hope that helps.
Mar 5, 2007. 8:58 PMsecretsnlies says:
Thankyou SO much for this tutorial!!! Would love to see one on printing with a paper/plastic/cardboard cut-out stencil too.
Jan 25, 2007. 11:32 PMsaves_the_dale says:
hi there... just got some few questions, im always having a bad time puting an ink on my shirt.. i am using a rubberized ink but once i printed it on shirt, i always get a thin coat which looks so badly.. i tried to coat the ink several times before i lift the screen but still i get a thin coat as a result.. just wondering what could be the problem.. hope you guys can help... thanks!!
Mar 3, 2007. 11:17 PMmarkp says:
if your screen it a high thread count, when you pull your squeegie pull one time pressing hard, this will give you a thin coat, and then pull another lightly so that you have a solid layer of ink all the way across your screen and lift without pulling again. This should give you a more pronounced coating. - the key is the light pull, or less thead count silk.
Sep 19, 2006. 7:06 PMkilrkats says:
How do you dry the ink now? I love the idea. I've been in the apparel industry for about 15 years but it's always nice to print things from the home and not make that huge investment in equipment. If your familiar with discharge ink that's also a really neat process to do with one color designs, but the ink doesn't react unless you apply heat at 350 degrees. Rob
Feb 20, 2007. 6:17 PMvalree says:
I've used water soluble textile inks and I have a heat gun.... Where can I get discharge inks? A google search was not terribly helpful. Thanks!

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