Dye
sublimation printers are been used mainly for creating prints on polyester
material. The fabric could be used for clothes or marketing media, such as
teardrop banners, hanging banners, "L" banners, flag banners,
backdrops, X Banners, trade demonstrate displays, roll up or pop up banners,
retractable banners, etc.
Dye
Sublimation Printing is diverse from other kinds of printing in that it makes
use of dyes instead of ink, like inkjet or laser jet printers do. Inkjet
printers make use of the CMYK colour spectrum (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and
Black), which is the print business standard for most of the printing globally
(RGB colour spectrum is used for mainly video, in contrast).
The printing
procedure uses the CMYO range, where the "O" represents an apparent
overprint that becomes black whenever uncovered to heat and pressure.
When
printing using the dye sublimation paper, also recognized
as heat transfer dye sublimation, primarily, the representation is printed to a
transfer paper by means of the CMYO ink set, then, once the paper is disconnected
from the printer, it is coordinated up to a polyester material and place on a force
rolling machine with intense rollers (around 400 ºF / 204 ºC) and gradually
rolled among the rollers until it comes out the back side with a ideal
(hopefully) representation sublimated to the material.
The term
"sublimation" has something to do with the chemistry of the dye,
which, when reacting to the warmth and pressure of the intense rollers, becomes
a gas and infuses itself everlastingly into the fabric. Thus, the expression universally
used for this kind of printing, dye sublimation
paper printing or
dye sublimation printing. The sort of paper used for is characteristically
called "dye sublimation transfer paper". I distinguish - it should have a fancier derivation for the ruler
of printing procedures, but that's it.
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