Sublimation Paper & Heat Transfer Paper: 13 Questions ...

20 May.,2024

 

Sublimation Paper & Heat Transfer Paper: 13 Questions ...

1. What is Transfer Printing?

Transfer printing describes two different types of printing: Heat transfer printing and sublimation. 

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They both have their pros and cons, but they both tend to be more suited for different needs. There is still some ambiguity on sublimation and how it works, so we are going to take a look at the most frequently asked questions and try and provide a little more clarity.

2. What is Heat Transfer Printing?

Heat transfer printing is done using a specialist paper that is called transfer paper. You can use a standard inkjet or laser printer to print onto this paper with your normal ink. You then place the paper onto your clothing and use a heat press, or in some cases, you can use an iron, and peel away the paper.

Your design will then be stuck-on to your garment, and you will be able to see the transfer. You can use most heat transfer paper on a variety of fabrics, including most poly textiles and natural cotton. You can print on both light and dark-colored garments.

3. What is Sublimation?

Sublimation is a modern digital printing technique that is increasing in popularity. Search volume has increased by around 115% worldwide since 2004, according to Google Trends. It uses sublimation paper and heats to print your design.

We advise that you use this on fabrics that are 85% poly or more. This is because it is the poly fibers that open their pores to accept the dye. You can use a lower composition, however, your colors will be affected. You’ll end up with more of a ‘vintage faded’ look. You can also print on hard surfaces with a poly-coating, such as keyrings, jigsaws, mugs and so much more.

4. What is Sublimation Paper?

Sublimation transfer paper is a specialist paper that is used exclusively in sublimation printing. Made using a paper substrate, which is broadly based on normal paper. A special coating added to the paper holds the dye sublimation inks. The coating includes around 35% silica and 5% binder, based on the weight of the paper when it’s dry.

5. How does Sublimation Transfer Printing Work?

Sublimation doesn’t use any liquid in the process. Inks heated from their solid state on the sublimation paper, convert straight to a gas. It is a printing method that bonds to poly fibers, and because the poly fibers have been heated, the pores expand. These open pores then allow the gas into them, which then fuses to the fabric itself, before resuming its solid state. This makes the ink part of the fibers themselves, rather than just a layer printed on the top.

6. What Are the Steps for Using Thermal Transfer Paper to Make a T-shirt?

Sublimation is a two-step process. Firstly, you need to print your design onto the sublimation paper, using specialist sublimation dyes. The image would need to be mirrored but don’t worry about that, Contrado does that for you when you place your order, so all you need to do is create your design as you want it to look when it’s finished.

Then you need to press the design from your paper onto your t-shirt (or fabric or surface). This is done using a heat press which applies either heat and pressure or heat and a vacuum. Once pressed, simply remove the transfer paper, and voila, your t-shirt is printed.

7. Does Sublimation Paper Transfer onto Dark Fabric?

Sublimation is best suited to white or light-colored fabric bases. You can use it on darker shades, however, it will affect your colors. White ink is not used in sublimation printing. White parts of the design remain unprinted which shows the base color of the textile.

The benefit of sublimation over heat transfer printing is that there is a much broader range of colors. This means that you could print your background color onto the fabric rather than use a different colored fabric, and because of the advanced printing methods, the material would feel exactly the same.

Want more information on sublimation paper china? Feel free to contact us.

8. Is heat transfer paper sensitive to humidity in the air?

Sublimation paper holds an enormous amount of moisture and humid air is not great for it. Exposure to humid air causes the sublimation paper to absorb it like a sponge. This results in image bleeding, uneven transfers, and color shifting.

Heat transfer paper is also sensitive to humidity. Inkjet or laser printing is more prone to dotting and color bleeding if there is excessive moisture in the paper, and as this form of printing applies a film, rather than being textureless, you may find that the transfer is not flat, or curls or peels at the edges.

9. Which is the right print side of the sublimation paper?

When working out which side to print on your sublimation paper, it is important that you print your design onto the bright white side. If you order sublimation paper from Contrado already printed with your design, you will be able to tell which side is the right side.

You’ll find that your colors look pale on the sublimation paper. This is completely normal and isn’t what the finished press will look like. Once transferred to your medium your colors will come to life! Another benefit of sublimation over transfer printing is that there is a much bigger range of colors.

10. Can thermal transfer paper be reused?

You can’t reuse your thermal transfer paper, whichever type you use. Although with sublimation paper, you may find that there is some ink remaining on the paper, it will not be enough to make a good-quality print.

With transfer paper, the iron’s heat melts the plastic lining on the paper, which transfers the ink to the fabric, as well as the plastic from the paper. This would be impossible to re-use.

11. What mistakes do you make when using a T-shirt transfer paper?

There are some common mistakes when it comes to designing your own t-shirts, other clothing, and items.

  • Printing on the wrong side of the paper
  • Applying too little pressure
  • Applying too much or too little heat
  • Putting the wrong side of the transfer to your fabric
  • Incorrect positioning
  • Not mirroring design*
  • Press for too long (you can end up scorching or melting the paper)
  • Using the wrong kind of inks on the wrong paper
  • Using the wrong material (sublimation requires a high poly percentage)

*remember, if ordering through Contrado, we will do this for you, it’s important that you don’t do this step.

We always suggest testing on a small piece first, to ensure that you get the right amount of heat and pressure, before printing your full design.

12. What are the Pros and Cons of Sublimation?

Pros

  • Color is permanently transferred to the fabric
  • No liquid in the printing process, immediately dry
  • Incredibly durable and super long-lasting
  • Completely textureless design, even when all over
  • Can be used on rigid products with poly-coating
  • Prints full colors, perfect for photos and a Variety
  • Inks have good UV resistance as standard
  • Self-weeding (only transfers the ink to the fabric)

Cons

  • Not great for dark-colored fabrics
  • Requires a high poly content (85%+)
  • More expensive to set up than transfer

13. What are the Pros and Cons of Heat Transfer Printing?

Pros

  • Much cheaper to set up, and can use a home printer
  • Can be used on 100% cotton fabrics
  • Works with both light and dark garments

Cons

  • Leaves a textured film on clothing
  • It is only for use on fabric, and doesn’t work on rigid products
  • Much less durable and fades a lot with washing
  • Can crack and peel over time
  • Cannot iron design (although you can iron the rest of the clothes)
  • Not self-weeding (you need to cut your image out – especially on dark fabric)

Thread: Heat transfer or sublimation

Originally Posted by purpledragon

Originally Posted by

Quick Guide
to print mugs and solid items ie placemats etc you will need a sublimation set up this comprises of
1 mug and heat press
2 Sublimation inks (IT MUST BE DYE SUBLIMATION INKS ANYTHING ELSE WILL NOT WORK)
3 Sublimation paper this is paper which has a special coating on it which allows the sublimation process to work ( IT MUST BE DYE SUBLIMATION PAPER ANY THING ELSE WILL NOT WORK)
4 Sublimation printables ie mugs place mats etc theres plenty of suppliers on here for you to browse through (THEY MUST BE DYE SUBLIMATION PRINTABLES ANYTHING ELSE WONT WORK DONT THINK A CHEAP 20P MUG WILL WORK IT WONT)
5 You can not print onto cotton with dye sublimation IT WILL NOT WORK
If you want to print on cotton your options are as follows

1 direct to gament printer ok if you have £10,000 to spare
2 inkjet or laser transfers ok if you buy good quality transfer paper draw back is its a square/rectangle block unless you can set a cutter to cut your image out
3 Vinyl transfers this is the sort of stuff you see with a funny caption on a t shirt you can over lay colours but not good for complex images and you need a plotter cutter ££££££
4 screen print but you will need a spare room for this and years of experiance would help

Heres the advice bit
you can pay 100 quid and buy a mug press and press mugs but remember you get what you pay for buy the best quality you can afford if this means you start with just a mug press and build profit up so be it dont be tempted to buy cheap its a false economy. Sawgrass hold the license on small format sublimation inks if it aint sawgrass or one of their other names then it aint legal ink and not likly to give good results .
Copy right is a serious subject only a fool will think he can advertise man utd mugs and get away with it , you wont i dont care how many on ebay are doing it their time will come you may earn a couple of grand over a short period of time but paying out 10 or 20 times that amount in court fees and compenstaion is not good business sense YOU WILL BE CAUGHT.
Tax / nat ins/ and public liability think you can get away with this ? think again the tax man is looking at ebay very seriously at the moment you wont get away with it and remember when you buy 72 mugs from a supplier he sends you an invoice on that invoice are your details the tax man also has access to these invoices obviously so when he sees your name and address he aint gonna assume you just smash a lot of mugs he will know you are a business. And apart from that its the quickest way to alienate forum members and you will find your advice and help dries up after all why should i as a legite business give a fly by night chancer advice on how to under cut me
and lastly it aint as easy as it looks you will get printer problems , you will get product problems , you will get customer problems and that bit of cheap chinease metal you bought will break down in the middle of a big important job and theres not as much money in this as you would think .
happy printing :)
Brett

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