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Another Question About Labeling Inks
I bought the Micron 005 pens to do my first quilt label. It's so fine that
I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Also I tried different practice inks on fabrics, ironed them in and later washed them to see which ones would wash out and they all did!. Again, what am I doing wrong. Thnx for your help. Barb C. |
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#3
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Howdy!
Put your label fabric on a piece of sandpaper, then use the Micron Pigma Pen; works for me every time. ;-) If the inks you're using for practice are not specifically permanent-for-fabric, they will likely wash out. Ironing non-permanent ink doesn'talways/usually make it waterproof, unless you don't want it to stay, then it will. g http://www.clotilde.com/cl/ has permanent marking tools in a variety of colors' here are a few mo http://www.ezquilt.com/products/notions/permmarkcan.htm http://www.colortime.com/fabric_mark..._fabric_marker http://www.dharmatrading.com/markers.html http://www.dickblick.com/categories/fabricmarkers/ Good luck! Ragmop/Sandy wrote in message .. . I bought the Micron 005 pens to do my first quilt label. It's so fine that I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Also I tried different practice inks on fabrics, ironed them in and later washed them to see which ones would wash out and they all did!. Again, what am I doing wrong. Thnx for your help. Barb C. |
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I've ironed freezer paper on the back of the fabric I make labels out of. I
use the same size Pigma you do and get very good results. I just let it dry. The ink stays in without setting with a hot iron. Kate T. South Mississippi wrote in message .. . I bought the Micron 005 pens to do my first quilt label. It's so fine that I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Also I tried different practice inks on fabrics, ironed them in and later washed them to see which ones would wash out and they all did!. Again, what am I doing wrong. Thnx for your help. Barb C. |
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On Thu, 13 May 2004 20:28:12 -0400, wrote:
I bought the Micron 005 pens to do my first quilt label. It's so fine that I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Also I tried different practice inks on fabrics, ironed them in and later washed them to see which ones would wash out and they all did!. Again, what am I doing wrong. Thnx for your help. Barb C. I have been practicing with the same pen size. I have found that I need to write more like I am using a calligraphy nib pen rather than like I am using a ball point pen. Going slowly and pulling the pen in the same direction as the pen is leaning towards seems to get me better results. Trying to push the pen over the fabric doesn't work because the fabric isn't smooth like paper is, so the pen nib hangs on the individual threads in the fabric. Other things I'm noticing: The smoother the fabric is, the easier it is to write on. A rough fabric is harder to get good results with. The pen writes a different size line than I thought it would, and it's not a very smooth line. I think that has more to do with the fabric than the actual pen. Smooth, even lines happen on smooth paper, not fabric. If I let the fabric sit overnight the writing seems to look better. This may be only because I am a little less critical when I look at it the day after, than I was when I was writing. Debra in VA |
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I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong?
Have you tried heavily starching the label before you write? I'm not sure it would work but it would seem to improve the surface for writing. Just a thought. Morag Anne in Detroit |
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I would think that the starch may get in the way of the ink contacting
the fabric. When my work shirts are nicely starched they don't absorb stains as easily. Not sure if I am right. This is just me thinking out loud Julie Richmond, VA said... I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Have you tried heavily starching the label before you write? I'm not sure it would work but it would seem to improve the surface for writing. Just a thought. Morag Anne in Detroit |
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Starch is commonly used as a resist in dyeing, so I'm with you. Starch may
interfere with the ink. (i.e.. the ink adheres to the starch, but the starch washes away and carries the ink with it.) Putting freezer paper on the back of the fabric or putting the fabric onto a fine piece of sandpaper works for me. -- Kathy A. (Woodland, CA) longarm machine quilting, Queen of Fabric Tramps http://www.kayneyquilting.com , remove the obvious to reply wrote in message .net... I would think that the starch may get in the way of the ink contacting the fabric. When my work shirts are nicely starched they don't absorb stains as easily. Not sure if I am right. This is just me thinking out loud Julie Richmond, VA said... I'm not able to write very well on the fabric. What am I doing wrong? Have you tried heavily starching the label before you write? I'm not sure it would work but it would seem to improve the surface for writing. Just a thought. Morag Anne in Detroit |
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Yep! You're probably right. Maybe what's needed is a different fabric for the
label. Something with a higher thread count. Morag Anne |
#10
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Thnx to all for the suggestions. What I finally settled with is the 05 pen
instead of the 005. It works great. Thnx again. Barb C. "MoragP" wrote in message ... Yep! You're probably right. Maybe what's needed is a different fabric for the label. Something with a higher thread count. Morag Anne |
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