WARNING: WARNING: WORK IN A WELL VENTILATED AREA and use Protective Equipment (including masks and gloves) when working with specialty printing and curing products and processes (including DTF, DTG, UV etc.) as fumes and processes may be hazardous. We highly recommend the use of a fume extractor when working with DTF powder in addition to good ventilation and filtration in your work area. The use of all specialty ink printing equipment and supplies such as inks, chemicals, powders etc. are at the sole risk of the user. Specialty inks and film require a good humidity and temperature environment (55% - 75% humidity, and 75° to 80°F) to minimize risk of ink clogs and film buckling.

Popular Questions
4 months ago
4 months ago
IColor ProRIP is a professional software solution designed for managing and optimizing the printing process for digital color printers, particularly those used for specialty applications like heat transfer printing. It offers advanced features such as color management, layout control, and support for white toner printing, enhancing print quality and efficiency. See full answer »
4 months ago
4 months ago
The IColor 650 and IColor 800 are both digital color printers, but they differ primarily in their print speed and capacity. The IColor 800 offers faster printing speeds and higher volume capabilities compared to the IColor 650, making it more suitable for larger-scale production environments. See full answer »
4 months ago
4 months ago
Sublimation printing involves transferring dye onto materials like fabric or ceramics using heat, resulting in vibrant and durable prints that are absorbed into the material. White toner printing, on the other hand, uses a specialized printer that includes white toner to print on dark or transparent surfaces, allowing for a wider range of media but typically resulting in prints that sit on the surface of the material. See full answer »
3 months ago
What’s so unique about the IColor™ line of Digital Color + White Transfer Media Printers?
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3 months ago
3 months ago
3 months ago
The IColor™ 560 is the updated version of the 550 with many common characteristics, with these differences:
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3 months ago
3 months ago
Easily print oversized images on letter / A4 sized printers (or larger) with UNINET’s optional IColor SmartCUT software. SmartCUT allows owners of smaller width printers to gain the benefits of tabloid or larger sized printers. SmartCUT is a cross platform, user centric tool that is a key component to expanding the size constraints of popular print methods, especially as it relates to transfer printing commonly associated with garment decoration. This ground breaking application turns your letter/A4 sized printer into a tabloid ‘plus’ capable machine, allowing for the splitting and splicing of one graphic across two or more printed transfer sheets… See full answer »
3 months ago
3 months ago
Rasterization, destressing adding negative space to your graphics is very important when considering the durability and the feel of the graphic. If you are going to print a graphic wider than 3 fingers, then you should rasterize or add distress to your graphic. See full answer »
3 months ago
3 months ago
The IColor™ 650 and 800 are both larger format printers. The IColor™ 650 can print a maximum width of 11.8 inches wide and the IColor™ 800 can print the maximum width of 12.5 inches wide. The IColor™ 650 has the same versatility of the IColor™ 560; you can overprint® and underprint® in white, as well as print sublimation, fluorescent colors, gold, silver and CMYK. The IColor™ 800 is a white overprinting printer only and does not support specialty toner kits or moving the position of the white cartridge. The 800 also is faster and has significantly lower cost per page due to its higher yielding cartridges. The 800 has a color gamut 30% wider than the IColor™ 650, which means it can print a wider variety of colors. See full answer »
3 months ago
3 months ago
Simply put, the IColor™ ProRIP software is the magic behind one pass printing with white as an underprint® or an overprint®. The most important point of the IColor™ ProRIP software is that it allows colors to be put down in layers. Regular printer drivers only concern themselves with what the eye sees on the top layer, the RIP allows you to separately control each layer, thus giving you the ability to control not only what you see, but what is behind that top layer (typically the white layer). The IColor™ ProRIP gives you the unique ability to use one machine to print images with white as an underprint® or an overprint®. You can now print vibrant colors on clear or dark media regardless of the background to which it is applied, where the… See full answer »
3 months ago
3 months ago
Heat transferred graphics can be used on most types of fabrics and virtually any color; heat transferred graphics lay on top of the fabric with adhesive base to adhere to the textile.
Through sublimation, the graphic transfers into the fabric instead of sitting on top of it. Sublimation will last much longer, but it only works on white or lighter colored polyester substrates. See full answer »
Through sublimation, the graphic transfers into the fabric instead of sitting on top of it. Sublimation will last much longer, but it only works on white or lighter colored polyester substrates. See full answer »

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