Page 3 of 3
Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 18 Jan 2013, 21:46
by gorgall2
Not if you use hot water.
Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 18 Jan 2013, 21:59
by twinsgran
It's very interesting reading all these replies..... it appears that the answer to the question is....whatever works for you!
Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 18 Jan 2013, 22:00
by Justin
Very much so

Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 18 Jan 2013, 23:10
by GoonerGary
gorgall2;63377 wrote:Not if you use hot water.
If your press is at 185 deg C, your water is say 60 or 100 degrees at most, it's still a fair drop, but I don't see the benefit. It doesn't take that long for mugs to cool, but whatever works for you as they say.
Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 19 Jan 2013, 03:55
by bms
GoonerGary;63371 wrote:Trupix paper with a sheet of plain paper. Remove transfer immediately after pressing and allow to cool naturally on a kitchen worktop. Plunging them into water is a drastic temperature change and you might hear a little ping as it cracks.
Some mugs might do this, but the 'plunge' is a little dramatic

I would slowly let the water go over the mug and have the water tepid. The main reason for doing this is to prevent bleeding of the image - a very hot mug left to cool naturally may still be so hot that the inks can still move in the mug. A fine line of yellow to blue for instance could result in a green blur right where they touch. Cooling the mug immediately after pressing will eliminate this.
However, such a topic has been discussed many times before and there are lots of variations - fans, window sills, water (hot, tepid, cool), naturally in cold winter weather on a granite surface etc etc!
Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 19 Jan 2013, 09:25
by mrs maggot
at the moment my preferred method - open back door and roll it in snow

Re: Mug Press Best Practices
Posted: 31 Jan 2013, 21:25
by icanattitude
I actually use a small convection oven for my mugs. I wrap plain copy paper over the transfer before putting on the wrap. When it's done, I unwrap, remove the paper and place the hot cup on a marble kitchen countertop. It pulls the heat out very quickly and I've never had a problem with bleed. My biggest problem is having my know-it-all husband change the temperature setting on the oven when I'm not looking!