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• #111052
There used to be a solvent for solvent welding acrylic. Put the two parts together and the solvent would wick down the join and weld the two parts together. I can’t remember what it’s called though.
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• #111054
Didn't use the chez_jay method. Did 16ml down to zero of white, and reversed with black.
Hard to accurately measure with a Calpol dispenser. Weighing it might work better but would need sub gram scales for the amounts I'm interested in.
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• #111055
Ebony and ivory live together in perfect harmony
Side by side on my piano keyboard, oh Lord, why don't we? -
• #111056
Because grey is the future.
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• #111057
You seem to have accidentally proved the one drop rule.
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• #111058
Can we see the resulting artwork?
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• #111059
That looks better than superglue.
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• #111060
That looks like the stuff.
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• #111061
I've never really had much luck with super glue but that stuff dissolves the plastic and kind of melts it back together.
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• #111062
Sounds perfect. Does it change the colour of the acrylic around the joint?
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• #111063
Still a way off actually making art. But it kind of works.
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• #111064
Because it dissolves the plastic if you put a bit too much on it can take the shine away. But no colour change.
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• #111065
It is also dichloromethanol. Don't go putting it in your tea.
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• #111066
dichloromethane
FTFY
Also butanone (methyl ethyl ketone, MEK), although you're right to point out that the CH2Cl2 will probably be listed as the cause of death
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• #111067
I stand corrected - it is dichloromethane.
How come you know so much stuff?
What's your day job?
Just prying..... -
• #111068
How come you know so much stuff?
I know very little, I just knew that one because a: I used to use that cement as a boy building Airfix kits and b: I looked it up to check
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• #111069
Would you not just use 4 screen for something like that (C, M, Y and K)? Or am I missing something?
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• #111070
Someone who know more about printing than I do will be along shortly. but I'm not sure screen printing works that way.
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• #111071
You can make halftone separations of cyan, magenta, yellow and black and overlay to make a ‘full colour’ image. Just wondered if there was a reason you wouldn’t use that process for that particular image. I know with fabric you’re going to need a lower thread count screen so your halftone will need to be coarser too.
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• #111072
not sure screen printing works that way.
It can, but I doubt whether you could maintain consistent registration across the piece on a fabric substrate
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• #111073
You’d be surprised - t shirts are usually printed on a big carousel, where the shirt is fixed flat and then doesn’t have to move at all between screens.
I guess moire is more of a problem with multiple halftone screens, but you work all that out when you’re exposing them rather than at the printing stage. -
• #111074
Gbj_tester is actually an acronym:
Genuine
Believable
Judicious
_
The
Encyclopaedic,
Social,
Terse,
Expert
RobotTheir impressive forum interactions are a testament to Velocio’s ingenuity and programming skill.
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• #111075
You’d be surprised - t shirts are usually printed on a big carousel
That bit I'm not surprised by - I've seen the carousel. The fixed points will obviously be as rigid as the platen and it's supporting structure, but fabric moves in mysterious ways so while the sides are fixed, the middle can drift about a bit.
That’s closer to what will happen, but I was hoping for something more like this.
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