Screen printing process
10035340 ยท 2018-07-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41C1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41C1/141
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M1/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F27/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F15/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F15/0863
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41C1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F27/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41F15/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of screen printing a design on a substrate, the method comprises the steps of controlling a computer-controlled plotter to cut an outline of the design into stencil material the stencil including a perimeter. Then, registering the perimeter of the cut stencil with marks on a printing screen and securing the cut stencil to the printing screen. Then, positioning the printing screen and cut stencil on the substrate and applying ink through the printing screen and stencil onto the substrate, wherein the design is reproduced on the substrate.
Claims
1. A method of screen printing a design on a substrate, the method comprising the steps of: controlling a computer-controlled plotter to cut an outline of the design into stencil material the stencil material including a perimeter; rotating a portion of a printing screen carrying screen material about a pivot to reverse sides of the printing screen to an alignment position to facilitate application of the stencil to the screen material; registering the perimeter of the stencil material with marks on the printing screen and securing the cut stencil to the printing screen; rotating the portion of the printing screen about the pivot to reverse sides of the printing screen to a printing position; positioning the printing screen and stencil material on the substrate; applying ink through the printing screen and stencil and onto the substrate, wherein the design is reproduced on the substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of: selecting the selected design from a database of designs maintained in a computer; using the computer, applying a scaling factor to the design; and communicating the selected design to the computer-controlled plotter.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate is a garment.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the design is at least one numeral.
5. A method of screen printing a design on a substrate, the method comprising the steps of: selecting a design from a database maintained in a computer; using the computer, applying parameters to the design, the parameters including a scaling factor; transmitting the selected design and parameters to a computer-controlled plotter; cutting the selected design into stencil material using the computer-controlled plotter, the stencil including a perimeter; moving a printing screen between a printing position and an alignment position by rotating a portion of the printing screen carrying screen material about a pivot to reverse sides of the printing screen to facilitate application of the stencil to the screen material in the alignment position; registering the perimeter of the cut stencil with marks on the printing screen and securing the cut stencil to the printing screen; moving the printing screen from the alignment position to a printing position; applying the printing screen and cut stencil to a substrate; applying ink through the printing screen and stencil and onto the substrate, wherein the design is reproduced on the substrate.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the substrate is a garment.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the design is at least one numeral.
8. A method of screen printing a design on a substrate using a computer-controlled stencil cutter, the method comprising the steps of: cutting, using the computer-controlled stencil cutter, a design into stencil material to form a cut stencil; rotating a printing screen carrying screen material about a pivot to reverse sides of the printing screen to an alignment position to facilitate application of the cut stencil to the screen material; securing the cut stencil to the printing screen in a selected location; rotating the printing screen about the pivot to reverse sides of the printing screen to a printing position; positioning the printing screen and cut stencil on the substrate; applying ink through the printing screen and cut stencil and onto the substrate, wherein the design is reproduced on the substrate.
9. The method of claim 8, further comprising the step of: selecting the selected design from a database of designs maintained in a computer; using the computer, applying a scaling factor to the design; and communicating the selected design to the computer-controlled stencil cutter.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the substrate is a garment.
11. The method of claim 8, wherein the design is at least one numeral.
12. The method of claim 8, wherein the step of securing the cut stencil to the printing screen further comprises: registering the perimeter of the cut stencil with marks on the printing screen.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) Turning now to the Figures, and particularly to
(7) Computer 3 may be a conventional personal computer, of the desktop or laptop variety; a dedicated, purpose-built computer; a tablet, or even a smartphone. Computer must be capable of storing and/or accessing and manipulating designs to be cut by plotter 1 and communicating the design to and controlling plotter 1 to actually cut the design. Computer 3 and plotter 1 may be connected for communication and control by parallel printer interface, RS-232 interface, IEEE 488, Universal Serial Bus (USB), or other means that permits communication of the selected design to plotter 1 in executable instructions to control the cutting of the design into the stencil medium.
(8) Designs may be created originally and stored on computer 3, or one or more predetermined, preexisting designs maintained in storage on computer 3. The designs may reside simply in file storage (folders or directories, by filename); or in a searchable, formal database maintained in file storage of computer 3 or a local network; or even in a remotely accessible collection of designs maintained in the cloud. For purposes of this application, any collection of one or more designs maintained in any storage medium accessible by computer 3 may be considered a database or database of designs.
(9) According to one embodiment of the method of the present invention, a user selects a design ultimately to be screen printed on a substrate in computer 3. As previously mentioned, the design may be selected from a database of designs or generated by the user (the term select a design, as used herein, includes both choosing, or choosing and modifying, an existing design; and generating an original or new design). As illustrated in
(10) This manipulation of the parameters of the design may occur in a commercially available graphics program such as Corel Draw, available from Corel Corporation, or another similar program, or in dedicated software. Such software may also include interfaces with the plotter drivers to control plotter 1.
(11) After selecting the design and applying the desired and appropriate parameters, the user may execute the commands to communicate or send the design to plotter 1, for cutting. The design (or a negative outline thereof) then is cut by plotter 1 into the stencil medium 5. Stencil medium 5 may be an adhesive-backed paper or polymer sheet that is flexible and capable of being fed through and cut by plotter 1 and is also sufficiently ink-impervious to perform properly as a stencil for screen printing. Alternatively, adhesive may be applied to stencil material after cutting or omitted entirely. A preferred and exemplary stencil medium is Matte PVC 3-Mil UV, which is an adhesive-backed PVC sheet available as part number PSLM-61150 from AMCAD and Graphics LP, 1201 Tappan Circle, Carrollton, Tex. 75006.
(12) As part of cutting the stencil 7, a stencil perimeter 9 of selected size or dimension is defined and cut into stencil medium 5. Perimeter 9 aids in proper positioning or registry of stencil 7 on the printing screen, as described below in connection with
(13)
(14)
(15) Inner frame 33 contains the mesh screen 35 for printing and is pivotally mounted in outer frame 31 by a pair of pivots 39. Inner frame 33 thus is rotatable or pivotable relative to and within outer frame 31, permitting the lower or printing side of screen 35 to face upward (an alignment position as shown in
(16) After stencil 9 is cut, as described above, inner frame 33 of screen holder 25 is rotated to the alignment or upward position (alignment position can be rotated 180 degrees from printing position, or anything between 0 and 180 degrees, as the user prefers), adhesive backing is removed from the stencil medium (or adhesive applied), and periphery 9 of stencil 7 is aligned with registry or alignment marks 43 and secured or adhered to screen 35. Cut portions of the stencil through which ink is to be applied or screened are removed from stencil 7. Inner frame 33 then is rotated to the printing position and secured there with stop pin 41.
(17) A garment or other substrate may be positioned on platen 23 for printing (shown in dashed lines in
(18) The method and apparatus according to the present invention possess a number of advantages. Primarily, it increases the flexibility and efficiency of a relatively small screen printing operation that is dependent on manual screen presses and stencils for them. It gives such operations the ability to create large numbers of similar or identical stencils and to vary them according to need without complete reliance on third-party suppliers or expensive and complex photo-emulsion stencils and equipment.
(19) The invention has been disclosed with reference to preferred and exemplary embodiments thereof. It is thus not limited, but is susceptible to variation and modification without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.