Thank you for sharing this project. I have not use the infusible ink and am wanting to make labels for two quilts. This would be the easiest and fastest way. Another video I watched pressed butcher paper with the easy press onto the fabric before transferring the ink to the fabric. I am very glad to see that is not necessary. your towels are super cute and a great gift idea!
Very well produced tutorial. One thought is when you are moving your cursor at the website and clicking on an action, please show exactly where you are going to click the item. That would really help us keep up with your progress. Thanks again for your work.
To make labels the same way I made the kitchen towels, you will need infusible ink pens, copy paper and the fabric for your labels must be atleast 60% polyester for the ink to be vibrant. The higher the cotton % on your fabric, the lighter the ink will be. The only way you can use an deskjet printer would be to have sublimation ink in your printer.
Thanks for this video! You've answered many of my questions. What brand towel did you use -- I just read your note about the 60% polyester...thanks again!
Nice gift project! Do you have a link to where you bought those dish towels? Also, a couple of things about working with cursive text (which you may have already figured out by now): 1. On the menu on top you'll see an option that says "letter space", you can decrease the space between the letters that way first to see how close it gets the cursive letters connected before you then go and manually move each letter over, it's not perfect but it saves a little time this way. 2. When you're connecting cursive text, instead of clicking attach, you can click weld and it will connect all the letters as one fluid piece. Hope this helps!
Thanks for the wonderful tips! I ordered 100% polyester dish towels on Amazon. VIVOTE Microfiber Dish Towel... www.amazon.com/dp/B07KSS4Y9Q?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Loved this video! It answered the questions I had. Thank you so much. BTY...your daughter is adorable! :)
I’m glad this video answered your questions. And thank you, she’s my niece😊.
Thank you for sharing this project. I have not use the infusible ink and am wanting to make labels for two quilts. This would be the easiest and fastest way. Another video I watched pressed butcher paper with the easy press onto the fabric before transferring the ink to the fabric. I am very glad to see that is not necessary. your towels are super cute and a great gift idea!
You are very welcome! And this would be a simple and quick way for you to make quilt labels😁
Great idea, it turned out great. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you! I hope you give it a try
Awesome job!!!
Thank you so much
Very well produced tutorial. One thought is when you are moving your cursor at the website and clicking on an action, please show exactly where you are going to click the item. That would really help us keep up with your progress. Thanks again for your work.
Good day, I would like to make labels. So, I can use regular copy paper? Can I use a deskjet printer? The infusable cricut ink pens? And any fabric?
To make labels the same way I made the kitchen towels, you will need infusible ink pens, copy paper and the fabric for your labels must be atleast 60% polyester for the ink to be vibrant. The higher the cotton % on your fabric, the lighter the ink will be.
The only way you can use an deskjet printer would be to have sublimation ink in your printer.
@@RealTalkwithSandie thanks
So is kinda like sublimation but with a regular copy paper?
Exactly 😀
@@RealTalkwithSandie thanks. I will give it a try.
Do you have a video of how to transfer a handwritten recipe instead of typing it yourself?
I don’t sorry.
Thanks for this video! You've answered many of my questions. What brand towel did you use -- I just read your note about the 60% polyester...thanks again!
I’m not sure what brand of towel. I ordered from Amazon and just searched for 100% Polyester kitchen towel.
Nice gift project! Do you have a link to where you bought those dish towels? Also, a couple of things about working with cursive text (which you may have already figured out by now): 1. On the menu on top you'll see an option that says "letter space", you can decrease the space between the letters that way first to see how close it gets the cursive letters connected before you then go and manually move each letter over, it's not perfect but it saves a little time this way. 2. When you're connecting cursive text, instead of clicking attach, you can click weld and it will connect all the letters as one fluid piece. Hope this helps!
Thanks for the wonderful tips! I ordered 100% polyester dish towels on Amazon. VIVOTE Microfiber Dish Towel... www.amazon.com/dp/B07KSS4Y9Q?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Thank you for the video. And can you wash as normal, in a washer machine? Will it fade?
Yes you can wash as normal. Infusible ink is permanent.
The ink won’t fade
Am I understanding, you printed on the basic paper then transferred it to the towel?
That is correct. I used basic copy paper and the ink transferred beautifully