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Screen Printing Machine: Print Faux-co!

Screen Printing Machine: Print Faux-co!
Make your own screen printing machine, a la Print Gocco, but for under $20! This one is designed to use Photo EZ screensand create 4x5 prints.

Buy this one at Etsy: Click here!
 
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Step 1Assemble Your Materials

Assemble Your Materials
You will need:
2 6x6 blocks of wood (free scraps from your favorite lumberyard)

4x5 Stencil Pro or Photo EZ stencil (I got mine from Circuit Bridge)
(This is basically a "silk" screen with light-sensitive emulsion already attached. For this tutorial I'm assuming that you have this product and have already followed the instructions that come with it to expose the emulsion and create your stencil.)

The 4x5 sheet of stiff plastic backing that comes with the stencil.
2 sheets of sticky-backed Fun Foam
1 6x6 piece of sturdy cardboard
2 hinges and screws
ruler
drill (not pictured)
scissors
craft knife
screen printing ink
tape
glue (I used a glue dispensing thingy normally for scrapbooking)
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24 comments
Feb 20, 2009. 1:55 AMLance Mt. says:
I'm going to make a slotting piece of wood with several perminate foam cuttings that with slide in.
Dec 2, 2008. 3:17 PMParsa says:
Wow, great idea, this really got me thinking. I have a PG5 Gocco, and was looking into using StencilPro screens. However, the boxed sets they sell are either too small or too large. You could probably make a bigger one of these to use with their 8.5x11 screens. That would make some pretty big prints. Also, companies like Welsh Products, Circuit Bridge, etc. sell plastic screen frames that could be used instead of the cardboard frame. Additionally, you could build a nice registration rig into the unit for multicolor prints. Hmmm....
Nov 30, 2008. 11:49 PMtracycox says:
thanks for this tutorial.. it's really well written and easy to follow. i don't know why this site seems to be full of stringent critiques of the tutorials when everyone is just trying to help each other by sharing knowledge.
Dec 1, 2008. 5:52 PMcodongolev says:
people act like they asked for them to write it and they failed them personally..... hey, you can learn from anything.
Sep 3, 2008. 3:04 PMkretzlord says:
well, they use a screen to put the ink on the pad, at least that's what it looks like
Jan 4, 2008. 6:45 AMstickfigure says:
For those not really familiar with Print Gocco. Its used in nearly 1/3 of all households in Japan to make greeting cards at New Years or other times of the year. Its an exposure unit and "screen printer" in one. Its only draw back is that it uses expensive and harder to find flash bulbs(similar to old photo bulbs) to expose the film. PhotoEZ can be used as a cheaper alternative to Print Goccos refill packs. Their site shows you how. I think this is a great Instructable but I would like to see it maybe as a squeege system with a UV exposure system. similar to the original which is its appeal. Maybe I'll build one as Im looking at using PhotoEZ for a project soon. all in all a great Instructable. Also the film used in this can be used to etch anything onto glass with glass etching paste
Mar 2, 2008. 8:28 PMmazookar says:
Resource for printing
Thank you for your details. After I read what was wrote there i was very curious about Print Gocco
Feb 16, 2008. 11:58 PMBeermancoldbeer says:
Has anyone tried this using the Riso brand ink designed for Print Gocco? The Riso ink seems thiner and "stickier" than regular screen ink. Also, what about adding embossing powder to your inked prints and then hitting them with a heat gun? Has anyone tried this yet?
Feb 18, 2008. 7:15 PMyetunguez says:
I tried this with the gocco ink, and I think it worked great. I still have that peaking problem though (where the ink forms peaks on your print. The squeegee method seems to solve that problem, instead of pressing the lid of the faux-co.
Feb 17, 2008. 12:15 AMBeermancoldbeer says:
Ink oozing out solution: go to Home Depot and get the thinnest, skiniest roll of foam, adhesive backed weather strip that they sell. Build a foam "corral" around the inked parts of your master. Oozing problem solved! Also works for using two colors at once and not having them bleed together.
Jan 25, 2008. 11:29 AMC-lo says:
I believe that is pad printing, not screen. Still ingenious
Aug 5, 2007. 11:20 AMljarque says:
Hello lemmingsolution, dchall8, more info on the PhotoEZ system may be found through their website at http://www.photoezsilkscreen.com/. The material you share is very interesting and thanks to this tutorial I have "discovered" this new turn in screen printing -thank you. I have a concern, though, when I see that you intend to "adapt" this screen-printing technique and tools to be used (if I understand correctly) as a "rubber stamp", a different printing method where the evenness in the thickness of the paint is totally out of your control whereas, with the squeegee approach, you will definitely achieve the much desired result of a perfectly even coating of paint, unless of course you also intend to add that "human touch" to photographic stenceling; additionally, how do you overcome the eminent mess when the paint starts, around the second print, to ooze out of the edges of your stencil's blocked areas? You may have to do a bit more work on solving post-production problems. I suggest a creative and constructive solution by trying to re-implement the use of the squeegee to your scheme; don't leave that element out of the deal. I think yours was an excellent idea that still shows a few conceptual loose ends, not difficult to improve on.
Jan 4, 2008. 12:26 PMnosemeat says:
at first i thought it might be lack of off-contact that makes your ink peak like that, but upon a closer look (imagine that!) i think i might have a better idear.
the excess ink that comes through is most likely from there being ink left in (or behind in this case) the screen when it is pushed through, because after the ink being laid down pushes through, the ink still in the screen will pull up on it, forming the peaks you see.
the difference with the squeegee is that there would (or should, at least) be no particularly noticeable amount of ink left behind in the screen after the squeegee passes, thus allowing a clean lift from the print.
thinner ink should help, but then it runs the risk of oozing more and also less opaque coverage.

p.s. this is a well written instructable and a clever take on printing. (and inexpensive, too!)
Sep 4, 2007. 1:01 PMBlack Jelly says:
what does this do?
Aug 22, 2007. 10:47 PMArtsy says:
The PhotoEZ is manufactured by the company, named Circuit Bridge. Their web site: http://www.cbridge.com/
They have even a better product - StencilPro. You can do a lot more with a product like that than just emulate Print GOCCO.
Jul 16, 2007. 5:16 PMVanessaEtsy says:
This is so great!
Jul 15, 2007. 11:06 PMdchall8 says:
Okay I'm lost. I'm a little familiar with screen printing and this doesn't fit my paradigm. I don't know what Print Gocco is nor what Photo EZ is, so that doesn't help. I'm not visualizing where the paper, paint, screen, foam, and plastic go in relation to each other. The pictures don't fit what I'm used to so I need more diagrams, pictures, or something. Is this more complicated than screen printing? Where did your screen come from?
Jul 16, 2007. 1:01 AMerfonz says:
The Gocco is a screen printing and block printing mix, it pushes the paint through the screen with a foam sponge back sorta thing. Print Gocco

PhotoEZ is a product that is a pre-emulsion covered screen that you can get and expose to make your own design. PhotoEZ

You combine it all and you get this instructable (which I like by the way, good job).
Jul 16, 2007. 12:27 AMtrebuchet03 says:
What does plastic backing that comes with the screen. from step 4 mean? That is, are you buying these screens from somewhere? Or Making them? Are they emulsion screens?

I think you need to explain this process a bit better -- with more information on the overall assembly of this thing. It took me a few minutes too long to connect the missing dots to see what it is your doing ;)
Jul 15, 2007. 10:52 PMPetervG says:
Something tells me.. this isn't screen printing...
Jul 15, 2007. 11:31 PMeleraama says:
It is. It's slightly different than the usual squeegee method (as mentioned), but it's the same general principle. This simply pushes the ink through the a foam mask rather than over a screen fused to plastic.

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Author:lemmingsolution