I picked up a screen printing kit a few months ago. I got a pretty good deal at Gwartzman’s and had always wanted to try it out. Brian warned me when I bought it,
“This isn’t easy. It will take you awhile to get good at it.”
My crafty confidence got the best of me, I would be making posters and cards with the best of them by the end of the week! In reality I would be so intimidated that I wouldn’t actually open the box for a week. When I finally did get started I went with a really basic design and it was okay. Nothing poster worthy, but it was fridge worthy for awhile. I did notice the process was a long one and the clean up was a pain.
Speedball kits claim that the screen filler can be washed out and the screen can be reused, but every blog or forum I have read tells me differently. I used almost boiling water and laundry detergent the first time and the screen eventually cleaned up with a strong scrub brush. The scrub brush was helpful but also scary, those screens aren’t that strong and can rip.
I tried screen printing a few more times but each time I struggled with the limitations. I wanted lots of bright colours and that would take hours! How do people do it? Maybe this is harder than I thought? I found myself giving up before the designs would dry. It really is an all day process and humidity doesn’t help.
After a few months of not touching the supplies I decided I wanted to make a t-shirt. The big feminist fist seemed like something that should be DIY and not corporate bought so I drew it up. The first print was awesome.

The T Shirt is okay. It’s a little smudged and not clear, but it’s definitely activisty looking. I’m so anarcho-feminist punk rock I don’t care that my tshirt is blurred. That’s a look, right?

By the time I did all of this it was late and I went to bed. The next day we threw a party and I spent the day cleaning up. I saw the screen still had filler on it and decided that I would hide it for the party and wash it later.
Two weeks later…

Hot water alone wasn’t getting that screen filler off. I tried windex and detergent like the instructions suggest but nothing came off at all. I used a scrub brush that got some flakes off but didn’t really dissolve the filler. The closest I got to removing it was with baking soda and vinegar, the filler got a lot lighter, but it’s still blocking the wholes in the screen.
So now I have a permanent feminist fist, not the worst thing, but I need new material to make more prints. I priced a few yesterday and was a little surprised at the amount. I will find the cheapest fabric in Toronto that doesn’t rip too easily and try again. This time I will remember that not every thing is as forgiving as acrylic paint.
Posted: July 11th, 2011 under Melissa - No Comments.
Tags: Melissa, Screen Printing