SOURCE: No Media Kings
1. Choosing and Preparing Your Screen
What you need:
~ A screen with the right mesh count for your printing
surface
~ Mr. Clean or any water based degreasing agent
The first thing you need when setting up a home print shop is the screen (I know, weird). Screens with aluminium frames last much longer than wooden frames which warp after repeated washings. Aluminium screens are usually only 10 dollars more than wooden screens of the same size, so even if you plan to use your screen more than one time, the extra money is definitely worthwhile. A sturdy aluminium screen will continue to lie flat on the printing surface after multiple uses and the mesh is pulled much tighter around an aluminium frame which produces a crisper printed image. They're also a lot easier to wash out than wooden screens.
The other major factor to consider is mesh count. The mesh count refers the tightness of the weave in the mesh fabric of the screen. A higher mesh count means the fibres of the mesh are closer together and a lower count means the fibres are more loosely woven, so more ink can pass through the screen. If you are printing on paper, you want a screen with a mesh count of about 230 for really optimal results. A screen that tight will allow you to print images with finer details and thinner lines. Since fabric is generally more absorbent than paper, you need a screen that lets through more ink when printing on t-shirts, totebags, or anything cloth. For fabric printing, you should use a screen with a mesh count of 110 or 160 (those tend to be the standard counts sold). I use 110. A lot of folks also opt for a mesh count of about 180, which allows printing on both paper and fabric, but there is an obvious loss of fine detail if you print onto paper at that count.
If you live in Toronto, the best place to buy screens and related materials (it's the cheapest too), is G&S Dye and Accessories at Dundas and University. Dixon, who runs G&S, knows everything about fabric printing (I almost believe he could bring about world peace) and is also very helpful about supplies and advice. His website has very detailed information about printing including some in-depth tutorials and awesome diagrams of home set-ups.
Once you have bought your screen, the first important thing to do is wash it out with cold water and a degreasing agent (I use the unfortunately gender-specific Mr. Clean, the concentration a little bit weaker than what you would put on the floor). Getting any grease out helps the emulsion to bond with the fabric which gives you a crisper stencil.
Also important is to understand the orientation of your screen
(not the gender specific kind). The flat "back" of the screen which
sits on the printing surface is called the "print side" or "paper
side" and the "front" of the screen, recessed inside the lip of the
frame, is called the "squeegee side."

2. Preparing Your Artwork
What you need:
~ Original artwork with a high contrast
~ Transparency film
Screen printing is a very "flat" medium, so images that are
starkly contrasted work best. When preparing your artwork to be
burned to the screen (to create the stencil), work in black and
white only - grey tones and the subtleties of photographic images
will not produce a workable stencil. If you start with a photo, as
in the example below, reduce the information to a line drawing, or
apply a filter or halftone screen in Photoshop which will reduce
the image to a series of dots.

Every colour you want to print requires a separate stencil.
Once you have the artwork prepared, print or photocopy it onto transparent film, and you will be ready to produce the screen stencil. It is very important that the black areas printed on the transparency are completely opaque, so hold it up to the light and make sure all the black lines are totally dense.
3. Burning the Stencil
What you need:
~ The screen
~ Emulsion and sensitiser
~ A scoop coater or squeegee
~ Rubber gloves
~ A rubber spatula
~ A darkroom and photosafe light
~ Black bristol board, or black cloth or felt
~ Transparencies containing your artwork
~ A sheet of glass
~ A light fixture with a 250 watt photo flood bulb
~ A timer
~ A spray bottle full of cold water
~ A shower head, spray nozzle or garden hose
This is the most intensive step in the screenprinting process, but if you take a little extra care when making the stencil, the printing process will go super fast.
The first thing to do, after your screen is degreased and
completely dry, is to coat the screen in emulsion. Emulsion is the
photosensitive goop that will make the stencil on the screen. In
areas where the emulsion hardens, the screen is blocked so no ink
can pass through. In areas where the emulsion is kept soft and
eventually washed out of the screen, the ink will pass through to
produce your print. Emulsion is hardened by exposure to light, so
you need to conduct this entire process in a darkroom using
photosafe lights to see by. I use the extremely ghetto mechanism of
a Blessed Virgin Mary (BVM) night light with a red christmas tree
bulb inside (witness the shame below) and coat my screens in our
windowless bathroom (it gets worse).

Emulsion comes in two parts, the emulsion proper and a small bottle
of sensitiser. Working by the red light of your own BVM, mix the emulsion with the sensitiser (each brand
comes with its own set of instructions on the label). Once
sensitised, emulsion is good for about 3 weeks at room temperature,
or about 3 months (tops - it gets iffy at the end of those 3
months) if refrigerated. Always wear gloves! when handling
emulsion. Those photo-chemicals are nasty!
To coat the screen, you can invest in a scoop coater (about 14
bucks) or can use the slightly grosser and less controllable option
of a squeegee or wallpaper smoother. A scoop coater is a very
easy-to-use trough which holds the emulsion and deposits a nice
even, thin coat on the screen. If you're using the squeegee or
smoother option, use a spatula to spread a line of emulsion along
one end of the screen (See below) and then, pressing very firmly
with the squeegee, drag the line of emulsion down or up the screen
until it is evenly coated with emulsion. It is very important to
have a thin, even coat of emulsion on the screen, uninterrupted by
drips or blobby areas that could mess up the clarity of your
stencil. I always double coat my screen by applying one coat to the
paper side and another to the squeegee side. You must double coat
all in one go while the first coat is still freshly wet.

Leave the coated screen in the dark to dry for at least 2 hours. Some tutorials say one hour, but I always have bad results with that timeline because the emulsion is not ready. The important thing is that the emulsion is completely dry before you expose your image. No stickiness allowed.
Once the coated screen is dry, you can expose it. It is easy to
set up a home exposure unit by arranging materials in this order
(from bottom to top)- 1. black cloth or board on the bottom to
absorb the light and prevent it from bouncing back through your
image area; 2. screen next with paper side down (against the black
board); 3. transparencies against the squeegee side of the screen,
oriented so that you can read them normally from left to right; 4.
a sheet of heavy glass on top of the transparencies to hold them
down as tightly as possible to the screen surface; 5. a lamp
situated about 1 or 1.5 feet above the glass top with a 250 watt
photo flood bulb installed (any good photo store has these for
about 8 bucks a bulb).

Don't forget to set up this exposure unit inside the darkroom!
Also, make sure there are no obvious dust particles or other matter
in between the transparency and the screen or the glass and the
transparency. Any material that blocks the light from getting to
the emulsion will show up in your stencil and will interrupt your
print.
The other big thing to keep in mind here is that the outer two inches of the screen area (closest to the frame on all sides) are unprintable. Because the tension is so high where the fabric is stretched around the frame, you can't get a good print out of the border areas of the screen. Make sure your image does not go closer to the frame than 2 inches all around.
Once you have the unit set up in the dark, turn on the flood light for about 15 minutes and allow the emulsion to harden in areas that receive the light.
At the end of 15 minutes, you can turn off the flood light and
work in the regular light of the room (no more darkroom necessary).
Remove the glass and transparency (you will probably be able to see
a ghost image of your design at this point, but if you don't - it's
okay) and immediately, thoroughly spray the entire surface of the
screen with cold water. You have to do this right away and wash the
screen out before the emulsion gets hard where your design is. Use
a spray nozzle in your shower (how convenient that my exposure unit
is in the bathroom) or sink, or use the garden hose to spray down
the the screen. Gently pass the spray across the whole surface of
the screen until your design is completely washed out. Hold it up
to the light to make sure no cloudy areas remain inside your
stencil. If any pinholes show where you don't want them, paint them
in with left over emulsion and leave them to dry in the sunlight.
Now your stencil is done! Let the screen completely dry before
printing.

4. Printing the Image
What you need:
~ One set of two hinge clamps
~ A large flat surface
~ A big sheet of acetate (at least 2 feet square)
~ The finished stencil on the screen
~ Packing tape
~ A rubber spatula
~ Appropriate ink for your printing surface
~ The right squeegee for your printing surface
~ Whatever you plan to print on (t-shirts or paper)
~ A hot iron
To set up for printing, you need a completely flat table or
counter top with two hinge clamps installed at the far side and a
large piece of acetate or velum (at least 2 feet long - much larger
than the paper or fabric you are printing onto). Tape the acetate
down firmly at one end so that it will not budge. You need it to be
perfectly fixed at one end in order to properly register your
print.

hinge clamps acetate for registration Fasten the screen into the
hinge clamps with the squeegee side facing up and make sure you can
move the screen into an upright position in the clamps without it
falling back down to the printing surface.

Use packing tape to block off any open areas of the screen that
you don't want to print.

Prop the screen up slightly with your roll of tape and apply a line
of ink onto the surface of the screen about 2 inches above the
image to be printed. Flood the image with ink using your squeegee.
Make sure you have the right kind of squeegee for the material
(paper or fabric) on which you are printing. If printing on fabric,
make sure you use fabric ink, otherwise your image will wash off in
the laundry.

inking the screen flooding the image Make sure the acetate is
between the printing table and the screen. Lower the screen to the
table surface and print the first copy of the image onto the
acetate. Immediately flood the image with ink to keep it from
drying out. Raise the screen to an upright position in the
hinges.

Use the acetate to register your image in the right spot on your
shirt or paper by orienting your shirt or paper underneath the
acetate.

Remove the acetate (just move it out of the way, don't detach it
from the table!) and lower the screen onto your shirt or paper.
Print the image by holding the squeegee at about 45 degrees and
applying even, strong pressure to pass the ink through the
screen.


Remember that this ink dries to plastic. Any area, however small,
where it dries in the screen will become unusable in the future. In
between each print, flood your image. When you're done printing,
wash the screen of all ink right away. Mr. Clean (or any non-gender
specific water based cleaning agent) can be used to wash out ink
(if necessary) without degrading the emulsion.
Screen ink dries very quickly, so if you are printing in many
layers on paper, you can print the second layer on top of the first
within about 20 minutes (I wait longer just to make sure no colours
bleed together, but you can do it in 20 no problem). If you are
printing on fabric, let the image dry for at least an hour (I wait
2) and then iron over top of the image on the hottest setting for
at least 1 full minute. Ironing the ink makes it colour fast in the
wash.
Here's what the printed shirt looks like, and here's what the
same image looks like, in two layers, on paper:

Easy huh?
~
Thanks again to Shannon for writing this amazing tutorial - check out her art on shannongerard.org.

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