Ihr Warenkorb ist leer
Ihr Warenkorb ist leerDie Foto-Emulsionsmethode des Siebdrucks ermöglicht es Künstlern, eine fotografische Schablone mit sehr detaillierten Bildern zu erstellen. Speedballs Diazo-Fotoemulsion und Sensibilisierer bieten professionelle Ergebnisse und machen teure Geräte und Dunkelkammern überflüssig. Für die Verwendung mit Polyester-Siebgeweben kann Speedball Diazo-Fotoemulsion und Sensibilisierer mit jeder wasserlöslichen oder lösungsmittelbasierten Tinte verwendet werden und können leicht mit dem Speedball-Fotoemulsionsentferner entfernt werden. Diazo Fotoemulsion muss mit diazo sensibilize gemischt werden.
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Bewertet in Kanada am 8. September 2024
It was my first time silk screening. It was a success.
christopher s campbell
Bewertet in den USA am28. Juni 2024
always my go to emulsion. i get a nice clean and clear image. i coat my screens and then i burn them in the bright sun for only about a minute and they normally come out pretty perfect.
Martin Bernhardt
Bewertet in Deutschland am 20. August 2023
Man benötigt einen Sensibilisator noch dazu. Warum nicht beides in einem verkaufen? Somit ist das Produkt unbenutzbar und zu teuer.
Martin Mckenzie
Bewertet in Kanada am 6. März 2020
Good product. Good seller
CaptainAmerica68
Bewertet in den USA am20. November 2017
I'm a Prop and Costume replicator / fabricator and a lot of the newer superhero costumes have screen prints on them. I blew threw $200 in Emulsion from companies like ScreenPrinting(.)com, and a good bit was from shipping. Not only did I waste money, I wasted hours and hours. Speedball's Emulsion is fantastic! My screens come out just they way they should. My only gripe is we have to order Diazo separately. They need to take that off as part of the item's description. "Speedball Diazo Photo Emulsion." It just don't have Diazo. Period. That is, and always is, an additive. I burned my screens with a blacklight bulb for 9-10 minutes at 15" away. My screens washed out fast and clean.
SoggyNacho
Bewertet in den USA am6. Februar 2016
This emulsion works very well. Keep in mind we are very inexperienced screen printers and are just now navigating our way around. We used Speedball's website for instructions on printing (there are several ways to print). Following their online guide really helped. The first run, we applied too much emulsion and it created dots or drips from pooling at certain places on the screen. Lesson learned, we moved on and applied it much thinner the next time and that eliminated the drips.Yes, they tell you this, but as a newbie, you think you're painting on enough but there is such thing as too much. We refrigerated the solution as instructed and it has performed well being preserved. Another hard lesson we learned is that screen cleaner is NOT the same thing as emulsion remover. We cleaned for well over an hour with just screen cleaner and it does not break up used/exposed emulsion. You need an emulsion remover to tackle this stuff. Though we did end up trying some home remedies to clean off the emulsion (lemon or citrus cleaners, hard spray (without a pressure washer) and scrubbing. We saved the screen for another use without purchasing the emulsion remover, but we will add that to our arsenal.This is a fun, albeit learning process. I now hold higher admiration for those screen printing companies that put a lot of work and apply the right methods to making a t-shirt. This is fun, but if you plan more than stencil screen prints, there is an art to it. Hopefully, we'll become artists with a little practice and patience.
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