Re: Help! Ink spot appearing after sublimation.
Posted: 20 Dec 2022, 13:00
Thats really odd, its clearly due to ink on the paper, so theres only a couple of ways that can get there.
1) overspray, name says it all
2) its on the design but you didnt know (I doubt this but I have seen it on some designs I have bought online that have been selected and copied badly)
3) you spilt ink (not this one)
Why do I think it is these options? well the ink splots are around the design, they are not in the middle of nowhere, they are conforming to the design space so makes sense that it is printing in that area.
What I would do is print a square of each colour in a line and then see if from a clear image (delete the back ground make it purely the pure colours)
Presuming you have 4 colours on your epson then print square pure black , square pure cyan, square pure yellow, and square pure magenta. Then sublimate this and see if you get the marks, if you do its not the design, if you don't then its coming from the design. If its not coming from the design then overspray caused by an issue with the print head I would expect. at this point speak to epson / check their website for details etc....
if it is from the design (ie nothing on the test design) then it could be from the source of the design or from the software you are printing from or your print settings etc etc, but this is a lot more work to investigate so deep dive time!
1) overspray, name says it all
2) its on the design but you didnt know (I doubt this but I have seen it on some designs I have bought online that have been selected and copied badly)
3) you spilt ink (not this one)
Why do I think it is these options? well the ink splots are around the design, they are not in the middle of nowhere, they are conforming to the design space so makes sense that it is printing in that area.
What I would do is print a square of each colour in a line and then see if from a clear image (delete the back ground make it purely the pure colours)
Presuming you have 4 colours on your epson then print square pure black , square pure cyan, square pure yellow, and square pure magenta. Then sublimate this and see if you get the marks, if you do its not the design, if you don't then its coming from the design. If its not coming from the design then overspray caused by an issue with the print head I would expect. at this point speak to epson / check their website for details etc....
if it is from the design (ie nothing on the test design) then it could be from the source of the design or from the software you are printing from or your print settings etc etc, but this is a lot more work to investigate so deep dive time!