Hybrid silk screen and direct-to-garment printing machine and process
10967650 · 2021-04-06
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41F17/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/0015
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J3/546
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F15/0863
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41J3/407
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J3/54
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A hybrid printing machine is described having both silk screening stations and a direct-to-garment digital printing station with a raster image processor to control a portion of a printing process.
Claims
1. A hybrid digital and screen printing system comprising: a direct-to-garment (DTG) printing station having a print head moveable into a printing zone; a direct to screen (DTS) printing machine for preparing a silk screen for use in the DTG printing station; a raster image processor (RIP) electronically coupled to the DTG printing station and the DTS printing machine, the RIP having a processor, and a memory storing computer readable instructions when executed by the processor takes the following steps: store in the memory a digital art file containing an electronic representation of the colors and their locations to be printed on the substrate to produce an indicia; sending a first signal to the DTS printing machine representative of a base coat of the indicia; and sending a second signal to the at least one DTG printing station representative of the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black colors of the indicia.
2. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 1 wherein the print head has a plurality of print heads positioned in an array of rows and columns.
3. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 2 wherein there are from 1 to 10 print heads in each row.
4. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 3 wherein there are from 4 to 20 print heads in each column.
5. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 3 wherein each row is dedicated to a single color.
6. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 5 wherein the rows follow in an order of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black.
7. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 6 wherein a first row will have n number of print heads and an adjacent row will have n-x number of print heads where x is from 1 to 3 print heads.
8. A hybrid digital and screen printing system comprising: an endless conveyor; a direct-to-garment (DTG) printing station positioned proximate the conveyor and having a print head moveable into a printing zone; a direct to screen (DTS) printing machine for preparing a silk screen for use in the DTG printing station; and a raster image processor (RIP) electronically coupled to the DTG printing station and the DTS printing machine, the RIP having a processor, and a memory storing computer-readable instructions.
9. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 8 wherein when the computer-readable instructions are executed by the processor it takes the following steps: store in the memory a digital art file containing an electronic representation of the colors and their locations to be printed on the substrate to produce an indicia; sending a first signal to the DTS printing machine representative of a base coat of the indicia; and sending a second signal to the at least one DTG printing station representative of the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black colors of the indicia.
10. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 9 wherein the print head has a plurality of print heads positioned in an array of rows and columns.
11. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 10 wherein there are from 1 to 10 print heads in each row.
12. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 11 wherein there are from 4 to 20 print heads in each column.
13. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 12 wherein each row is dedicated to a single color.
14. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 13 wherein the rows follow in an order of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black.
15. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 14 wherein a first row will have n number of print heads and an adjacent row will have n-x number of print heads where x is from 1 to 3 print heads.
16. A hybrid digital and screen printing system comprising: a printing press comprising: an endless conveyor; a plurality of object supports connected to the conveyor and spaced from one another and moveable with the conveyor, each of the object supports defining a printing zone; a digital-to-garment (DTG) printing station positioned proximate the conveyor and having a print head moveable into the printing zone; a direct to screen (DTS) printing machine separate from the printing press and outside the printing zone for preparing a silk screen for use in the DTG printing station; a raster image processor (RIP) electronically coupled to the DTG printing station and the DTS printing machine, the RIP having a processor, and a memory storing computer-readable instructions when executed by the processor takes the following steps: store in the memory a digital art file containing an electronic representation of the colors and their locations to be printed on a substrate to produce an indicia; sending a first signal to the DTS printing machine representative of a base coat of the indicia; and sending a second signal to the at least one DTG printing station representative of the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black colors of the indicia.
17. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 16 wherein the print head has a plurality of print heads positioned in an array of rows and columns.
18. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 17 wherein there are from 1 to 10 print heads in each row.
19. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 18 wherein there are from 4 to 20 print heads in each column.
20. The hybrid digital and screen printing system of claim 19 wherein each row is dedicated to a single color.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) To understand the present invention, it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings and attachments in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail preferred embodiments of the invention with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the broad aspect of the invention to the embodiments illustrated.
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(11) The screen printing head assembly 20 is pivotally connected on a frame to overlie a pallet and is mounted for movement between a printing position and a non-printing position. The printing head includes a frame for supporting a printing screen that has a desired pattern for printing a white base coat only, as described below. A squeegee carriage carrying a squeegee and a flood bar is movably mounted on the frame for traversing a printing stroke when the head assembly is disposed in the printing position and a flood stroke when the head assembly is in the non-printing position.
(12) Operatively connected to the frame of the head assembly are one or more locating bars which are cooperatively associated with the pallets so as to ensure proper registration of the pallets when the printing head assembly is disposed in the printing position. The conveyor is driven on its endless path by a drive mechanism such as a chain or belt which is threaded about a sprocket journalled on a main drive shaft which is coupled in driving relationship to a drive motor. Operatively associated with the drive mechanism is an indexing system to effect an intermittent indexing of the respective pallets from station to station during machine operation.
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(15) In one preferred form of the invention, the DTG print head 100 is capable of printing in four colors: cyan, magenta, yellow and black, and using combinations of these colors virtually any color can be made.
(16) Preferably, there are from 1 to 10 print heads in each row and from 4 to 20 print heads in each column. Each column has from 1 to 5 print heads for each color. In one preferred form of the invention, each column has a plurality of groups 106 of 1 to 5 consecutively stacked print heads and each group is dedicated to a single color. Preferably, each group of print heads is organized by color and preferably in the order of cyan 110, magenta 112, yellow 114, and black 116 from a top or front row 120 to a bottom or back row 122. The number of print heads in each group of the plurality of groups of print heads has the same number of print heads as the other groups or a different number of print heads from the other groups.
(17) Similarly, the number of print heads in each row can be the same or can be different. In one preferred form of the invention, a first row will have n print heads and an adjacent row will have n-x print heads where x is from 1-3 print heads and preferably one.
(18) Each print head of the DTG print head can have a single nozzle or a plurality of nozzles such as from 2-12 nozzles, more preferably from 3-10 and most preferably 8 nozzles per print head.
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(21) The digital art file 202 can be in any suitable format known to those skilled in the art including .jpeg, .pdf, .ppt, .bmp, .dib, .gif, .tiff, .png, and .ico.
(22) Suitable inks for printing by the hybrid printing machine includes, for example, plastisol (with and without additives, such as expanding inks), water based inks, PVC (preferably phthalate free), discharge inks (which remove die), foil, glitter/shimmer, metallic, caviar beads, glosses, nylobond, mirrored silver and other solvent based inks. Textiles include natural and artificial fibers from animals (e.g., wool and silk), plants (e.g., cotton, flax, jute, hemp, modal, piña and ramie), minerals (e.g., glass fibers) and synthetics (e.g., polyester, aramid, acrylic, nylon, spandex/polyurethane, olefin, ingeo and lurex). Each combination of ink and textile will demonstrate different properties, such as those associated with wicking, holding, hand, penetration and appearance.
(23) The process of printing an indicia onto a substrate includes the steps of loading a digital art file of the indicia into a memory, converting the digital art file into two files, a first file representative of a white base coat portion of the indicia and a second file representative of the CYMK colors of the indicia. Using a processor, sending a signal representative of the first file to a DTS machine to prepare a screen for printing the base coat on a substrate or textile. Sending a second signal to a DTG print station where it is held in memory. The screen for the base coat is loaded onto a screen printing station of a hybrid printing machine and the station is loaded with a white or light colored ink. A textile is loaded onto a platen of a hybrid machine and conveyed into a position under the silk screen printing station and the base coat is applied to form a prepared textile. The platen of the hybrid machine is then conveyed to a position under the DTG print station and the CMYK colors are printed on the prepared textile on top of the base coat in accordance with the second file. Preferably, the DTG print station has a DTG print head with an array of print heads that span a width dimension of the indicia such that the DTG print head need only be moved along a length dimension of the indicia to form the indicia. Upon completion of the printing, the ink is cured or dried and the completed textile can be sold or packaged for sale.
(24) Many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be protected otherwise than as specifically described.