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Re: B&W xerox transfer
- To: BOOK_ARTS-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: B&W xerox transfer
- From: Ken Ingraham <keningra@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 25 Mar 1998 23:22:13 -0500
- Message-id: <199803260431.UAA18796@SUL-Server-2.Stanford.edu>
- Organization: home
- Sender: "Book_Arts-L: The list for all the book arts!" <BOOK_ARTS-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
I agree that the fusers in many copiers work at much higher temps than
house hold irons are capable of producing. If one has access to a heat
press, the kind used for T-shirt appliques, this might be more
successful.
Ken
R Starr wrote:
> However, toners vary in terms of the amount of heat that it takes to
> fuse them. The HP laser printers work at a lower temperature than
> most commercial copiers. Thus, it may be the case that the fusing
> temperature on the Kinkos machine was too high to iron off with a
> regular iron.