The #1 reference and source for anyone wanting to decorate garments, this book covers in detail the entire screen printing, heat transfer and inkjet-to-garment process in an easy-to-follow step-by-step ...
anthony-whalen says: Well if your looking for no frills you could buy a 1000 watt metal halide and take an old table and cut a large square out of the top(right in the middle, as big as the screens you will expose), put a ...
Well if your looking for no frills you could buy a 1000 watt metal halide and take an old table and cut a large square out of the top(right in the middle, as big as the screens you will expose), put a 1/4 inch thick piece of glass over the hole, drape an opaque piece of black fabric or plywood painted flat black around the table making a box out of the table. If you can't make a vacuum hold down use a heavy peice of opaque black fabric over the table and use a bag of sand to lay on the fabric over the screen to hold the screen flush against the film and glass. This will work but I recomend you find a nice used piece of equipment.
Well if your looking for no frills you could buy a 1000 watt metal halide and take an old table and cut a large square out of the top(right in the middle, as big as the screens you will expose), put a 1/4 inch thick piece of glass over the hole, drape an opaque piece of black fabric or plywood painted flat black around the table making a box out of the table. If you can't make a vacuum hold down use a heavy peice of opaque black fabric over the table and use a bag of sand to lay on the fabric over the screen to hold the screen flush against the film and glass. This will work but I recomend you find a nice used piece of equipment.