View allAll Photos Tagged laserprinter
Cradle to cradle?
Recycle old cartridges
"Lyreco offer a toner and inkjet cartridge collection service from our customers and in house users, to ensure as many empty cartridges as possible are recycled. Virgin cartridges are re-manufactured and those that cannot be recycled are melted down and used for other purposes. It’s part of our duty of care to understand what happens to the product we send to the recyclers. If you need further information on this subject contact us here"
Attempting the laser printer iron on process.
From what I've read online (in the last day or two), the process of printing out a line art design with a laser printer on regular paper and ironing the design onto fabric is popular with fabric artists and cross-stitchers because it creates a faint yet visible pattern to follow.
My experiment suggests that for a dark, readily visible design the process, while marginally functional, is less than optimal.
Next experiment, once the materials arrive: inkjet iron-on transfer paper.
Attempting the laser printer iron on process.
From what I've read online (in the last day or two), the process of printing out a line art design with a laser printer on regular paper and ironing the design onto fabric is popular with fabric artists and cross-stitchers because it creates a faint yet visible pattern to follow.
My experiment suggests that for a dark, readily visible design the process, while marginally functional, is less than optimal.
Next experiment, once the materials arrive: inkjet iron-on transfer paper.
Machined-metal scanning mirror on an aluminum circuit board!
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
Attempting the laser printer iron on process.
From what I've read online (in the last day or two), the process of printing out a line art design with a laser printer on regular paper and ironing the design onto fabric is popular with fabric artists and cross-stitchers because it creates a faint yet visible pattern to follow.
My experiment suggests that for a dark, readily visible design the process, while marginally functional, is less than optimal.
Next experiment, once the materials arrive: inkjet iron-on transfer paper.