Referring back to Transfer Artist Paper (TAP): I have found that it transfers very well on to silk Dupion - see the image of my granddaughter on the left.
Lesley Riley, who developed TAP advises using white cotton with a high thread count but the results on my silk were excellent as well. Some others that I had done on cotton are shown in my previous post about image transfers
I have only tried white silk Dupion so far - however I imagine a pastel coloured silk would look very pretty too.
Another way of getting an image on to silk Dupion is to adhere a piece of it to a sheet of freezer paper. Here you can see the freezer paper and the silk rolled back with images which have been put through my Epson inkjet printer.
Freezer paper sheets are available in A4 size if you don't want to cut a piece from the roll and at least you will know they are very straight and exactly the right size.
In order to match up the piece of silk with the freezer paper I made a plastic template to draw around and then cut the silk a tiny fraction smaller so it wouldn't hang over the edge of the freezer paper and cause problems with the printer. Make sure to leave no loose threads though as the printer may get these round the roller.
My Epson printer seen above has a straight feed through and when using the freezer paper method is probably less likely to cause problems than if using a printer which turns the paper over.
This Canon printer shown here to the right takes the paper into the front and rolls it around the roller and turns it over. I have found this works fine when printing on commercial cotton sheets backed with paper and also on the TAP sheets.
A couple more tips on using the TAP sheets. You can print, draw or paint on the white side of the TAP. They have a bluish tint on the reverse so you know which way to put them into the printer or which way to iron them on to the fabric.
The first example shows a fairy that has been scanned in and printed on to the TAP, then after trimming off the surplus it has been ironed with a hot dry iron on to white cotton.
You can see by the indentation in the cloth how the whole of the TAP sheet transfers firmly on to the fabric, so any surround not wanted should be trimmed off before ironing.
The other example shows that when it is ironed on to the fabric the image is reversed (silly me!) So if it is text or you want it to face in a particular direction reverse the image before putting it on to the TAP. The top one was pencil and the lower one Sharpie pens.
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