All our frames are made by hand, by us, in our printlab here in the UK.
We designed both the frames and the mesh-tensioning process with the goal of producing a sturdy product which is confidence inspiring, satisfying to use and offers the last word in value for money for the budget conscious printer.
We have personally tested our frames through thousands of print cycles in our lab to ensure its fitness for purpose.
So, if you want to be creative without spending a fortune, these frames will serve you well.
Approximate Internal Dimensions
A5: 270mm x 170mm (to fit A5 Paper - Size - 210 x 148mm)
A4: 340mm x 245mm (to fit A4 Paper - Size - 297 x 210mm)
A3: 450mm x 340mm (to fit A3 Paper - Size - 420 x 297mm)
Max image sizes on screens: This is a guide and our maximum when the screens are used for custom screen exposure. When you're using them for stencils and exposing them yourself, you may find you can use more of that internal area.
A5: 21cm x 14cm
A4: 29.5cm x 21cm (full A4 paper size)
A3: 38cm x 29.5cm (smaller than actual A3 paper size)
A3+: 47.5cm x 32cm (easily print full A3 paper size)
Pic 'N' Mix: Any size screen, any mesh count:
Just add the screens you want to the basket and the discount will be automatically applied at checkout.
The higher the t number, the greater amount of mesh lines per cm.
43t - Printing on fabric and t shirts. Great for opaque inks, metallics etc. Great for almost any kind of fabric / t shirt printing where there is not much detail in the design.
55t - Printing on fabric. The most commonly used mesh count. There's not a lot of jobs you can't do on 55t. Great for blocky prints, great for prints with a bit of detail. Good for all types of ink, including waterbased and opaque.
77t - Printing on fabric, card and paper. Finer detail designs.
90t - Printing on paper, card and occasionally fabric. Good for detail. Used a lot for inside neck prints, wash care instruction, brand logos.
120t - Printing on paper, card and occasionally fabric. Super fine detail.
Keep your screens in great condition: Tips from the workshop: Great Screens