davedoublem
Established Member
I'm thinking of investing in a small router or laser cutter within the next few months as I'm starting to use a lot of craft shapes for various projects and am having to purchase these from various suppliers. At the moment I'm purchasing craft shapes both in mdf and also poplar (3mm thick). I'm trying to find methods of printing onto this wood. I've had success in the past using a heatpress and certain transfer papers with birch wood. Themost success hasbeen using some t-shirt transfer papers, although I'm having to use quite expensive papers. The issue is it's impossible to get a white print since printers don't print with white toner (i'm aware some newer machines do but it's quite complex). Therefor any white within a design does not show up on the wood. This is not too bad with poplar or birch as this wood is fairly light but when working with a dark wood such as mdf most prints are too dark.
I wondered if there are any transfer papers that are specifically for wood whereby they actually press directly over the wood ie with some kind of glue that reacts with a heat press so as to create an ultra strong bond. I have a clock and also a sign where it appears there is a type of transfer that has been applied to the the surface of the wood. It feels smooth with no grain, and you can see a thin transfer layer above the wood so there is obviously something stuck to it. I'm not sure if these are precut prior to applying to the shape or how these are done.
I'd be interested to know if anyone has any ideas. I can't currently invest any any new machinery at the moment but I do own a heat press, ink jet printer and laserjet printer so looking for something that could possibly work with any of these.
I wondered if there are any transfer papers that are specifically for wood whereby they actually press directly over the wood ie with some kind of glue that reacts with a heat press so as to create an ultra strong bond. I have a clock and also a sign where it appears there is a type of transfer that has been applied to the the surface of the wood. It feels smooth with no grain, and you can see a thin transfer layer above the wood so there is obviously something stuck to it. I'm not sure if these are precut prior to applying to the shape or how these are done.
I'd be interested to know if anyone has any ideas. I can't currently invest any any new machinery at the moment but I do own a heat press, ink jet printer and laserjet printer so looking for something that could possibly work with any of these.