Hi Jane, I appreciate your video. However, when someone tells me I shouldn't try something, I have to do it. Good news! I tried printing a black and white photo on two sided glossy paper that is for ink jet printers. I tried it both on a homemade Gelli plate and the Gelli Arts plate. They both worked and I only left the photo print on the Gelli plate for 5-10 minutes. I pulled both tests with plain copy paper and while acrylic paint. It works! I couldn't find business paper as I live in Spain. I just found a two sided glossy photo paper especially for inkjet and laser. I used my inkjet printer. Just wanted to share. Thank you
I've always appreciated how you experiment, determine the best process, then clearly explain it to others. Thank you. I also didn't have success printing with the setting on glossy paper. I came here to read the comments -- maybe ask a question -- and found the answer. Once I put the setting on PLAIN PAPER it worked like a charm!
I have had great success with this method. Thank you so much Jane. I'm using an Epson 3760. Black is the only ink that is pigment so I print in black and white only. An important note is to set the paper to plain paper. The only failure I had was when I set the paper to glossy. The pigment on the paper set to glossy does not smear, but when set to plain it does, which means it will transfer to the gel plate. In fact, you can wipe the print off of the paper with a baby wipe. I leave the printed image on the gel plate for an hour as you suggested. After removing the printed image, I like to apply a thin later of Golden isolation coat, let it all dry and then use paint or soft gel gloss medium to pull the print from the gel plate. After cleaning the gel plate with baby oil to remove residue ink, I actually got a second image from the same printed image.
Oh thank you so much, i've been using the glossy setting with no success, tried it with the normal paper setting and used glossy paper and it worked great.
Do you need to do the transfer right after you print your image from printer, or can you print ahead of time and then do the transfers? Does the ink need to be " fresh" from the printer? Thx!
Thank you for this video. This is what worked for me. Before buying the buying the professional paper, I used some double-sided photo paper that I had on hand (I know some people said it wouldn't work). I have an epson 8500. Using photoshop, I set the settings to black / grayscale and my printer to plain paper. I printed a detailed alphabet print like the video. I let it sit on the gelli plate for about 15 minutes after smoothing down vigorously with a roller. It left a perfect image! I used light yellow acrylic paint as my background. Thn, I let it sit till dry, and it peeled up beautifully with no loss of image. I can't believe how well this worked. So double-sided photo paper can work (at least with Epson 8500) as long as you use the right settings! And it didn't even leave a ghost image that needed to be cleaned off. Thanks for all the advice in the comments!
@@JaneDunnewoldhi Jane, when you said you can’t paint acrylic colours onto the plate over the transfer, isn’t that what you are doing when you put that pink acrylic paint on? Thanks for sharing. ❤
Hi Jane, can you give more detail on paper used please. I’m in Australia and trying to find the paper you have listed. The gloss finish papers come up as photo included in description. Thanks so much 😊. Wonderful teaching for us creatives. ❤
Thanks for your kind words. I get your frustration. It can be hard to source products in other countries...The paper is referred to as a high quality semi-gloss paper and it's semi-gloss on both sides, not just one, like photo paper. It's advertised as being good for brochures. I hope that helps, but you may need to go to a print shop and look at what they have available to actually find it.
I really love your videos- right to the point, clear and concise. Thank you. I have been immersing myself in gel printing videos for the last couple of months and I finally ordered one which will hopefully arrive soon! One of the ideas I’ve been thinking of for possible transfers with inkjet is transparency film which I’ve used to transfer onto paper in the past. Have you tried it?
Hi Jane. Great and concise video. I was super excited to try this method and bought the paper you suggested and tried it several times, letting the image sit for an hour on the gelli plate, but no luck. Do I need to have a completely clean plate (with no residue, wiped clean with a baby wipe?) I, too, am using an Epson printer, I'm wondering if their toner doesn't work with this method....? Thanks for any ideas you might have!
It's probably the printer. They are not all compatible with the process. DO see if your Epson has a "photo" black ink, as opposed to the regular black ink, and try that setting.
Jane, I am learning so many new things from your tutorials! I have one question, and that is, what size is the geli plate you are demonstrating with? Many thanks!
Thank you for this video. I am trying to learn more about gel plate printing, and your video was awesome! You explained so well, and gave me some great ideas. I still have to buy the supplies.do you have a list of supplies you recommend? I have a printer and acrylic paint….so I need a gel plate…should I start small? I guess I need a A brayer? And that special business paper…appreciate your Ideas and any help and advice. I’m a fan!
Definitely need a brayer. And the plate, of course. Don't buy from TEMU to save money. They sell inferior products and have 0 customer service. Be aware the not all printers work for this, even if you have the right business paper.
This is important information, exactly what I was looking for. Thank you so much, Jane! I want to create finished pieces a little like the one you showed at the end, but with photos my brother takes. If it is sealed with medium afterwards, I assume you can use any paint/medium after the transfer? Have you tried transfering to wood?
I have had great success using transparency film to transfer directly to paper using hand sanitizer. 😍 ua-cam.com/video/o8N1oXKQU2c/v-deo.htmlsi=TyyfhYteB9PMahOT
Jane I have tried everything too. Got the exact paper…followed you instructions to the tee and the only time I got anything was when I misaligned paper on the gel plate and took it off and there was some transfer on the edges. So frustrating.
Sorry for the frustration. The fault is usually the printer, either because it uses dye instead of pigment, or has a setting that prevents you from getting a full load of pigment because the printer is on saver mode. Some printers have black dye for one setting and black pigment for another so you have to manually decide to use the pigment. Printers have so many variables it drives people crazy, but that's almost always where the problem is. See what you can find out about your printer because even if it doesn't work for this, at least you would know why.
Yes, agreed, wonderful teaching style. I am still having hit-and-miss success with image transfer and I'm finding it a bit discouraging. I purchased a new inkjet printer , the glossy paper, adjusted my print settings to get as much saturation as possibe. My photo has been on the jelly pad for a half hour now with nothing happening, I'll wait another 30 min and then am wondering if I can use Acrylic pouring medium on the back of the paper to peel away the paper. I've again had some success with this befor on regular copy paper but never on a gelli pad....ideas?
Never tried it. I do know the printer can't be dye based. It needs to be pigment and some printers have two settings, one of each of black. make sure you are using the pigment setting.
@@JaneDunnewold Thank you for the information regarding dye and pigment ink. I'm new to gel painting, just started trying yesterday. Unfortunately my printer uses dye-based ink, so I guess that explains why it's not transferring onto the gel pad.
Thanks for a great video. Could you provide a link to the paper you used? I'm trying to source similar paper so looking for the weight etc to help with that. Many thanks.
I have an inkjet printer and was looking for a way to transfer black and white text, so this video is spot on. Do you think it would transfer onto a plastic surface, rather than paper (specifically I am trying to transfer onto a Polaroid)?
Hi thanks for generously sharing your knowledge and techniques. I notice the extra large size gel plate you are using. Did you make this yourself or is it store bought. I live in Australia so access to some products here can be difficult. Regards Grahame
Hi Grahame, I don't know if you can find the larger plate in AU but I know it is sold in the UK. I found mine on amazon, and it was made by the Gelli Plate people.
That Epson model might not be one that works. Unfortunately, they are all different. You might google it online and see if you can find a manual that will give you more details.
Thans a lot your good informations. Very useful! But now I am looking for such a large gelli plate as you. I tried with self Made . But they are not that strong. Can you tell where you got Youri?
I love this video and desperately want to try it but I’m in the UK and the link you provide is not available here. Are there any suggestions of brand names of business paper that you could suggest so I can try and get them here? I don’t own a gel plate yet but love the photo idea but don’t want to use magazines (as it’s other people’s stuff) and I don’t have access to a laser printer so don’t want to buy the gel plate etc if I can’t actually use it. Any help gratefully received. Thanks.
Hi Jane, this is such a random question but I’m wondering what brand of v-neck t-shirt you wear? I’m always looking for a good durable t-shirt. I’m really enjoying your videos!
Sure! I am an equal opportunity teacher and will answer most anything and I love random! I wear Universal Threads from Target and usually buy six black ones at a time and wear them out and then use them for studio clean up. Got to keep the repurposing going!
Hi Jane! I found a business paper from HP in Canada but there is an "everyday" one and a "professional" one. In the description, I don't see a difference but the professional one costs more. Which one sounds more like your paper? Thank you.
Hi Jane, I have 3 inkjet printers and I've tried using the paper and method you recommend with all 3 printers without success. After waiting 30 min with the image on the gel plate, upon removal, none of the image has transferred to the plate. I'm printing the image in grayscale. I'm using the exact paper you recommend. My printers are both pigment and dye ink. Any advise or suggestions? Many thanks for your wonderful videos! I'm planning to sign-up for Bkgd & Text class!
Hi there, I'm sorry you aren't having luck. When the class ran last time, we had a thread on FB that people shared successes on, and it was very mixed. Dye based printers don't work at all, and some brands of pigment printers were not that great either. I was surprised it was such a crapshoot. That Fb page is gone now so I can't go back and look, but I'll see if I jotted down some of the printers that worked and what brands they were. I'll add it here so maybe that will help you.
Thanks Jane for answering! Excuse my translation into English, it is with a translator. 😊😅 Could you do a tutorial on paper lamination? It's a very interesting technique but I can't get it right. Thank you!
I. Ought this paper and printed on an inkjet printer but it didn’t transfer to the Gelli plate. I followed your instructions. Not sure what I am doing wrong.
Apologies! Here is the paper I use: www.officedepot.com/a/products/244369/Office-Depot-Brand-Professional-Business-Paper/?region_id=001079&mediacampaignid=71700000113537517_20459718889&gclid=CjwKCAjwyNSoBhA9EiwA5aYlby5jR1hCmwpvTz2NpuCRH-bYmGWqMPiNfWgiT68VwUMw9lsyGyXw_xoCSIYQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
I tried this using my Epson Inkjet printer on double sided brochure paper. It did not work. I let it set for an hour. Could you share the brand of printer you are using, the brand of paper and the brand of the gel plate. Maybe that is the secret to this. It looks very nice and I would really like to try it. Thanks.
Ths is interesting because others who transfer put a thin layer of black paint down thn the print, wait, and then pull print with a white or titanium white paint.
Hello Jane, Your gel plate looks larger than 16x20. Is it a DIY or commercial?May I inquire where you purchased your oversized print plate. Thank you, Jennie
Hi Jane, I appreciate your video. However, when someone tells me I shouldn't try something, I have to do it. Good news! I tried printing a black and white photo on two sided glossy paper that is for ink jet printers. I tried it both on a homemade Gelli plate and the Gelli Arts plate. They both worked and I only left the photo print on the Gelli plate for 5-10 minutes. I pulled both tests with plain copy paper and while acrylic paint. It works! I couldn't find business paper as I live in Spain. I just found a two sided glossy photo paper especially for inkjet and laser. I used my inkjet printer. Just wanted to share. Thank you
Great!!
How did you make a homemade gel plate
there are online resources that go over process.
I've always appreciated how you experiment, determine the best process, then clearly explain it to others. Thank you. I also didn't have success printing with the setting on glossy paper. I came here to read the comments -- maybe ask a question -- and found the answer. Once I put the setting on PLAIN PAPER it worked like a charm!
That's awesome! I'm so glad it worked for you!
I have had great success with this method. Thank you so much Jane. I'm using an Epson 3760. Black is the only ink that is pigment so I print in black and white only. An important note is to set the paper to plain paper. The only failure I had was when I set the paper to glossy. The pigment on the paper set to glossy does not smear, but when set to plain it does, which means it will transfer to the gel plate. In fact, you can wipe the print off of the paper with a baby wipe. I leave the printed image on the gel plate for an hour as you suggested. After removing the printed image, I like to apply a thin later of Golden isolation coat, let it all dry and then use paint or soft gel gloss medium to pull the print from the gel plate. After cleaning the gel plate with baby oil to remove residue ink, I actually got a second image from the same printed image.
good point. thanks for clarifying!
Oh thank you so much, i've been using the glossy setting with no success, tried it with the normal paper setting and used glossy paper and it worked great.
I used a small portable epson pixma tr150 printer with great success, thank you
Oops I mean canon
Do you need to do the transfer right after you print your image from printer, or can you print ahead of time and then do the transfers? Does the ink need to be " fresh" from the printer? Thx!
Jane, you are such a clear communicator. Always have been.❤
Thank you. I appreciate the compliment and the time it takes to write to me.
Thank you for this video. This is what worked for me. Before buying the buying the professional paper, I used some double-sided photo paper that I had on hand (I know some people said it wouldn't work). I have an epson 8500. Using photoshop, I set the settings to black / grayscale and my printer to plain paper. I printed a detailed alphabet print like the video. I let it sit on the gelli plate for about 15 minutes after smoothing down vigorously with a roller. It left a perfect image! I used light yellow acrylic paint as my background. Thn, I let it sit till dry, and it peeled up beautifully with no loss of image. I can't believe how well this worked. So double-sided photo paper can work (at least with Epson 8500) as long as you use the right settings! And it didn't even leave a ghost image that needed to be cleaned off. Thanks for all the advice in the comments!
Yay for you! Thanks for being generous with your experience.
Super! I've always thought there had to be a way, without finding a different printer. Thank you!
You're welcome!
@@JaneDunnewoldhi Jane, when you said you can’t paint acrylic colours onto the plate over the transfer, isn’t that what you are doing when you put that pink acrylic paint on? Thanks for sharing. ❤
I’m not having any luck with regular copy paper. Going to try the slicker paper. It makes sense that the toner would sit on top of the paper.
Try the Office depot brand business paper. NOT photo paper and it should work for you.
@@JaneDunnewold Zero luck with slick copy paper. Some luck with magazines and older books.
Hi Jane, This is a great video. I'm new to gel printing, and you really make me want to learn more.
I'm so glad!
Great information 😊 I will be trying this out as soon as I get the paper.
Great!
T♥Y for sharing your knowledge. Looking forward to giving this a go once I find the paper you mention.
Make sure you use the black setting on your printer that is NOT for photographs.
Hi Jane, can you give more detail on paper used please. I’m in Australia and trying to find the paper you have listed. The gloss finish papers come up as photo included in description. Thanks so much 😊. Wonderful teaching for us creatives. ❤
Yes I’m in the UK and would like to know too please.
Thanks for your kind words. I get your frustration. It can be hard to source products in other countries...The paper is referred to as a high quality semi-gloss paper and it's semi-gloss on both sides, not just one, like photo paper. It's advertised as being good for brochures. I hope that helps, but you may need to go to a print shop and look at what they have available to actually find it.
Hi, can you please let us know if you found a good paper. I also live in Australia and I'm going to check what Office Works have to offer.
hp brochure paper glossy works great too
@@helenwinter2115
@@helenwinter2115I'm in Australia too, did you find the paper in Officeworks?
AWESOME!!! Love the detail you achieved! Do you need to use that special paper for both steps or could I use artists canvas on the final print?
You can put the print on any background so the canvas should be ok.
I really love your videos- right to the point, clear and concise. Thank you.
I have been immersing myself in gel printing videos for the last couple of months and I finally ordered one which will hopefully arrive soon!
One of the ideas I’ve been thinking of for possible transfers with inkjet is transparency film which I’ve used to transfer onto paper in the past.
Have you tried it?
Thanks for the kind words. I haven't had great luck with transparencies on fabric...
So glad for the warning. Thank you.
Thank you so much, I've been looking for this information ❤❤❤
You are so welcome!
thank you, I will definitely try this technique!
You're so welcome!
This is brilliant!!! Thankyou so much for sharing this!
You're so welcome!
Hi Jane. Great and concise video. I was super excited to try this method and bought the paper you suggested and tried it several times, letting the image sit for an hour on the gelli plate, but no luck. Do I need to have a completely clean plate (with no residue, wiped clean with a baby wipe?) I, too, am using an Epson printer, I'm wondering if their toner doesn't work with this method....? Thanks for any ideas you might have!
It's probably the printer. They are not all compatible with the process. DO see if your Epson has a "photo" black ink, as opposed to the regular black ink, and try that setting.
Jane, I am learning so many new things from your tutorials! I have one question, and that is, what size is the geli plate you are demonstrating with? Many thanks!
That was probably my 9" x 12" plate.
excellent teaching! thank you :)
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for this video. I am trying to learn more about gel plate printing, and your video was awesome! You explained so well, and gave me some great ideas. I still have to buy the supplies.do you have a list of supplies you recommend?
I have a printer and acrylic paint….so I need a gel plate…should I start small? I guess I need a A brayer?
And that special business paper…appreciate your Ideas and any help and advice. I’m a fan!
Definitely need a brayer. And the plate, of course. Don't buy from TEMU to save money. They sell inferior products and have 0 customer service. Be aware the not all printers work for this, even if you have the right business paper.
This is important information, exactly what I was looking for. Thank you so much, Jane! I want to create finished pieces a little like the one you showed at the end, but with photos my brother takes. If it is sealed with medium afterwards, I assume you can use any paint/medium after the transfer? Have you tried transfering to wood?
Yes, if sealed you should be able to paint over it. and no, I have not personally transferred any images to wood.
I loved your video. I’m curious to know if you could possibly ink blend distress inks or distress oxide inks over your final print to add some color.
The only way to know is to try it! Not something I had thought of doing. (yet!)
I wonder if transparency film paper would work too. I have some to try
It might but I haven't had luck with it. It usually depends on the printer.
I have had great success using transparency film to transfer directly to paper using hand sanitizer. 😍 ua-cam.com/video/o8N1oXKQU2c/v-deo.htmlsi=TyyfhYteB9PMahOT
Jane I have tried everything too. Got the exact paper…followed you instructions to the tee and the only time I got anything was when I misaligned paper on the gel plate and took it off and there was some transfer on the edges. So frustrating.
Sorry for the frustration. The fault is usually the printer, either because it uses dye instead of pigment, or has a setting that prevents you from getting a full load of pigment because the printer is on saver mode. Some printers have black dye for one setting and black pigment for another so you have to manually decide to use the pigment. Printers have so many variables it drives people crazy, but that's almost always where the problem is. See what you can find out about your printer because even if it doesn't work for this, at least you would know why.
Yes, agreed, wonderful teaching style. I am still having hit-and-miss success with image transfer and I'm finding it a bit discouraging. I purchased a new inkjet printer , the glossy paper, adjusted my print settings to get as much saturation as possibe. My photo has been on the jelly pad for a half hour now with nothing happening, I'll wait another 30 min and then am wondering if I can use Acrylic pouring medium on the back of the paper to peel away the paper. I've again had some success with this befor on regular copy paper but never on a gelli pad....ideas?
Never tried it. I do know the printer can't be dye based. It needs to be pigment and some printers have two settings, one of each of black. make sure you are using the pigment setting.
@@JaneDunnewold Thank you for the information regarding dye and pigment ink. I'm new to gel painting, just started trying yesterday. Unfortunately my printer uses dye-based ink, so I guess that explains why it's not transferring onto the gel pad.
Thanks for a great video. Could you provide a link to the paper you used? I'm trying to source similar paper so looking for the weight etc to help with that. Many thanks.
Try looking for shiny brochure paper from Office Depot.
Thanks, Jane, but I'm in Oz. :)
I have an inkjet printer and was looking for a way to transfer black and white text, so this video is spot on. Do you think it would transfer onto a plastic surface, rather than paper (specifically I am trying to transfer onto a Polaroid)?
I sort of doubt it since inkjet remains water soluble. You might get it onto the polaroid, but it would not be stable if it got damp.
Hi thanks for generously sharing your knowledge and techniques. I notice the extra large size gel plate you are using. Did you make this yourself or is it store bought. I live in Australia so access to some products here can be difficult. Regards Grahame
Hi Grahame, I don't know if you can find the larger plate in AU but I know it is sold in the UK. I found mine on amazon, and it was made by the Gelli Plate people.
@@JaneDunnewold thanks for the reply Jane, approximately what size is the gelli plate you are using in this video?
Jane you are wonderful but I’m not having any luck. What printer do you use? Mine is epson ET . Can’t find a place in printer to change to pigment ink
That Epson model might not be one that works. Unfortunately, they are all different. You might google it online and see if you can find a manual that will give you more details.
Hi Jane, could you tell me were did you get a gelli plate that size?
Thank your tutorial was very helpful!
I bought it on Amazon and I think it was the Gelli plate brand...
Thank You for sharing your skills. 🙏🤲👌♥️‼️💐Toom@CapeTown
Thanks for watching!
That gel plate is huge, what brand is it?
It's Gelli brand!
THANK YOU.
Thans a lot your good informations. Very useful! But now I am looking for such a large gelli plate as you. I tried with self Made . But they are not that strong. Can you tell where you got Youri?
I found it on Amazon.
Hi Jane, you mentioned that you can reuse the professional business paper! If so, do you just wipe the paper clean after you transfer the image?
Or use the other side!
Although I just realized what I actually meant by that is that you can often get more than one transfer from the image...
I love this video and desperately want to try it but I’m in the UK and the link you provide is not available here. Are there any suggestions of brand names of business paper that you could suggest so I can try and get them here? I don’t own a gel plate yet but love the photo idea but don’t want to use magazines (as it’s other people’s stuff) and I don’t have access to a laser printer so don’t want to buy the gel plate etc if I can’t actually use it. Any help gratefully received. Thanks.
I would look for a shiny paper that is usually used for brochures and is shiny on both sides. I hope you find an equivalent.
Hi Jane, this is such a random question but I’m wondering what brand of v-neck t-shirt you wear? I’m always looking for a good durable t-shirt. I’m really enjoying your videos!
Sure! I am an equal opportunity teacher and will answer most anything and I love random! I wear Universal Threads from Target and usually buy six black ones at a time and wear them out and then use them for studio clean up. Got to keep the repurposing going!
@@JaneDunnewold Awesome thanks for the info!
You can use laser printer images but you need paint on the gel pad first just like using magazine pages.
Yes, I've done alot of that, too.
Hi Jane! I found a business paper from HP in Canada but there is an "everyday" one and a "professional" one. In the description, I don't see a difference but the professional one costs more. Which one sounds more like your paper? Thank you.
Probably the more expensive one (of course!!) DO make sure the finish is glossy and my paper is glossy on both sides...
@@JaneDunnewoldHaha! Thank you! I haven't bought it yet but that will probably be a good winter project.
Hi Jane, I have 3 inkjet printers and I've tried using the paper and method you recommend with all 3 printers without success. After waiting 30 min with the image on the gel plate, upon removal, none of the image has transferred to the plate. I'm printing the image in grayscale. I'm using the exact paper you recommend. My printers are both pigment and dye ink. Any advise or suggestions? Many thanks for your wonderful videos! I'm planning to sign-up for Bkgd & Text class!
Hi there, I'm sorry you aren't having luck. When the class ran last time, we had a thread on FB that people shared successes on, and it was very mixed. Dye based printers don't work at all, and some brands of pigment printers were not that great either. I was surprised it was such a crapshoot. That Fb page is gone now so I can't go back and look, but I'll see if I jotted down some of the printers that worked and what brands they were. I'll add it here so maybe that will help you.
I couldn’t get mine to work either. I have a cannon printer.
Please explain the process of the last image
Hi @bingcherry6271 - The completed piece I talk about at the very end? which part of the image?
I had a student stick regular printer paper image on the plate and can’t get the print image off the gelli plate.
Try baby oil, or as a last effort, try soap and water.
Hola Jane, Saludos desde España. ¿Podrías hacer algún video sobre laminación de papel a tela? Ojalá leas mi comentario😊
I'm so sorry I don't speak Spanish so I am not sure what your question is. Maybe someone will help me out and translate so I can answer you.
Thanks Jane for answering!
Excuse my translation into English, it is with a translator. 😊😅
Could you do a tutorial on paper lamination?
It's a very interesting technique but I can't get it right.
Thank you!
I want to do a picture from my ink jet printer of my granddaughter. Is this going to work with this paper and technique
It depends on the printer as not all work. It needs to be one that isn't dye- based ink.
I. Ought this paper and printed on an inkjet printer but it didn’t transfer to the Gelli plate. I followed your instructions. Not sure what I am doing wrong.
It might be your printer. They don't all work, unfortunately.
so, no cotton cold press or textured papers?
You can try it but the paper may affect how it looks.
Is this shiny brochure paoer?
yes! Office Depot Business Paper --> amzn.to/4fGmFwk
I am not seeing any links for supplies. My eyes aren’t good enough to read the box the paper is in. Please post the link for the paper
Apologies! Here is the paper I use: www.officedepot.com/a/products/244369/Office-Depot-Brand-Professional-Business-Paper/?region_id=001079&mediacampaignid=71700000113537517_20459718889&gclid=CjwKCAjwyNSoBhA9EiwA5aYlby5jR1hCmwpvTz2NpuCRH-bYmGWqMPiNfWgiT68VwUMw9lsyGyXw_xoCSIYQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
THANK YOU!!!
You're welcome!
Is there a way to do this when you don’t have an inkjet printer?
You can use a laser printer but it's a different process and would not use the same paper.
I'm confused. The print was never lifted. Did I miss something?
It stays on the organza, which is sheer. So it is applied to the background, not transferred from one surface to another.
I tried this using my Epson Inkjet printer on double sided brochure paper. It did not work. I let it set for an hour. Could you share the brand of printer you are using, the brand of paper and the brand of the gel plate. Maybe that is the secret to this. It looks very nice and I would really like to try it. Thanks.
It was the Office Max/ Office Depot brand business paper. NOT photo paper.
u let it sit for a few hours before u peal the paper of? other vids i have seen do like after a few mins
It depends alot on the printer. and also the paper. I've had some that worked after a few minutes and others that took longer.
Maybe Epson brochure paper ?
you would need to try it to be sure.
Why is the U and the V in the wrong order in your transfer?
must have been a mistake.
Ths is interesting because others who transfer put a thin layer of black paint down thn the print, wait, and then pull print with a white or titanium white paint.
That's slightly different and usually uses laser copies...
Hello Jane, Your gel plate looks larger than 16x20. Is it a DIY or commercial?May I inquire where you purchased your oversized print plate. Thank you, Jennie
It is a 16 x 20. I'm not aware that they make them any larger...maybe it's the camera angle.
PS - That would be gessoed & sanded artists canvas.
If you are talking about using it as the background, yes, it should work.
What is the pink?
Acrylic paint marker.
Do you print on the gloss or matt side of the paper?
Both sides are the same.