Textile Printing
Textile Printing
Textile Printing
• Substrate
• Machine
• Printing paste
Printing Paste Formulations
• Block Printing
• Roller Printing
• Screen Printing
• Requirements of wood
• Hard
• Resistant to chemicals
• Light in weight
• Good wear and abrasion properties
Block Printing
Advantages of Block Printing
• Fabric comes in contact with the engraved roller and the areas in
contact with the grooves (having the paste) collect the color.
Roller/Engraved Roller Printing
• Limitation:
• Advantages:
• Fabric is adhered to the printing table, which is covered with a resilient felt, or
rubber material.
• Each screen is placed upon the fabric in turn, the paste applied to the one end of
the screen and then spread across the screen by hand using a squeegee.
• Guide rails along the edges of the table ensure each screen is applied in design
register.
Hand Screen Printin
• Advantages
• Designs are easy to transfer to screens
• Frame size can be easily varied
• Freedom to choose repeat size
• Pressure applied is much lower than roller printing
• Texture surfaces are not crushed
• Freshness of design maintains
• Limitation:
• Highly skilled workers are required.
• Production rates are extremely slow.
Hand Screen Printing
Hand Screen Printing
• Requirements
• Flat screen
• Squeegee
• Printing table
• blanket
• Print paste
Flat Bed Screen Printing
• Squeegee types
• Blade type (moves with the help of an electric motor).
• Roller / rod type (moves with the help of a powerful electromagnet moving beneath the
printing blanket.
• Limitation
• Low Productivity but higher than hand printing.
Rotary Screen Printing
• Squeegee remains stationary inside the rotating screen at lower area that
contacts the fabric.
• Squeegee
• Blade type (conventional rubber, metal blade)
• Rod type (metal bar)
• Correct design registration depends on screen positioning
• Advantages:
• Printing of fine intricate patterns
• High production rates
Rotary Screen Printing
Rotary Screen Printing
Rotary Screen Printing
Post Print Processes
• After printing and drying the fabric, the dye or pigment only stay on
the surface of the fibers in the printed area with very little fiber
penetration and bonding with fibers.
• Drying:
• Usually done at 110-120°C.
• After printing the fabric is only dried to avoid any design distortion by falling
the layers of printed fabric on each other.
• Fixation:
• Curing
• Usually for pigment printing.
• Dry heat is applied to cross-link the binder thus entrapping the pigment
particles into it.
• Ageing (Steaming)
• Usually for dyes as they need to penetrate into the fiber.
• Time depends on temperature .
• For reactive printing applied at 100C for 5-15 min.
Post Print Process
• Steam provides the required moisture for dye penetration by condensing onto fabric
and forming a localized dye-bath.
• Hygroscopic agents, as Urea, help to attain this moisture on fabric surface
• Washing
• To remove unfixed dye, and thickening agent.
• Usually for dyes only.