View allAll Photos Tagged squeegee
Lets see what franmar's strip-e-doo can do to this old screen. I got about 20 old screens thru a friend of a friend that was getting rid of his old equipment. That emulsion (stencil) has probably been sitting in that screen for at least 3 years.
11/09/2025. Cuxton, UK. The Princess of Wales during a visit to the Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, a family business that specialises in hand designing and screen- printing furnishing fabrics. The Princess spent time with Design Director Tandine Rawkins, and observed how she free-hand sketches all the artwork for every design. Her Royal Highness then moved to the printing room and had the opportunity to take part in screen-printing a design on fabric by pushing coloured dyes through an engraved silk-screen using a squeegee. The Princess also observed the last step in the production process where the printed fabric is fed through a conveyor oven, which heat-fixes the print to the basecloth. Picture by Toby Shepheard / Kensington Palace
Yellow is in the screen and my old squeegee fell forward into the ink and cause me a lot of hassle throughout the printing, with my hands covered in yellow. Should've just cleaned it when it happened, but wooden squeegees don't clean easily.
A worker uses a squeegee to push muddy flood water out of a building in Hindman, Kentucky.
Catastrophic flash floods across eastern Kentucky and wider Appalachia have killed at least 25 people.
The federal government sent tractor trailers of bottled water to the region, and more financial assistance is on the way.
The flooding -- as with other recent weather disasters -- was further amplified by the climate crisis: As global temperatures climb as a result of human-caused fossil fuel emissions, the atmosphere is able to hold more water, making water vapor more abundantly available to fall as rain.
Scientists are increasingly confident in the role the climate crisis plays in extreme weather, and have warned such events will become more intense and more dangerous with every fraction of a degree of warming.
11/09/2025. Cuxton, UK. The Princess of Wales during a visit to the Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, a family business that specialises in hand designing and screen- printing furnishing fabrics. The Princess spent time with Design Director Tandine Rawkins, and observed how she free-hand sketches all the artwork for every design. Her Royal Highness then moved to the printing room and had the opportunity to take part in screen-printing a design on fabric by pushing coloured dyes through an engraved silk-screen using a squeegee. The Princess also observed the last step in the production process where the printed fabric is fed through a conveyor oven, which heat-fixes the print to the basecloth. Picture by Toby Shepheard / Kensington Palace
The set includes glass washer for application of water or chemical solution, stainless steel glass squeegee for glass drying, telescopic poles, scrapers, and rubber replacement etc. - www.atcomaart.com/pd/484848484849888073/glass-cleaners/gl...
11/09/2025. Cuxton, UK. The Princess of Wales during a visit to the Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, a family business that specialises in hand designing and screen- printing furnishing fabrics. The Princess spent time with Design Director Tandine Rawkins, and observed how she free-hand sketches all the artwork for every design. Her Royal Highness then moved to the printing room and had the opportunity to take part in screen-printing a design on fabric by pushing coloured dyes through an engraved silk-screen using a squeegee. The Princess also observed the last step in the production process where the printed fabric is fed through a conveyor oven, which heat-fixes the print to the basecloth. Picture by Toby Shepheard / Kensington Palace
I came back to Station 4 to take pics of the rigs in the daytime! I win the geek award! Now gimme my duct tape!
This guy was really cool, after interrogating me for about 15 minutes and threatening me with death-by-squeegee to make sure I was relatively sane he let me by to take pics of the rigs in the background. Yeah!
These guys weren't on duty when I came by for the CERT Community Meeting.
At the beginning of my 'Human Condition' Art project we were asked to do a self portrait with any form of media in monochrome. I wanted to do something different than a forward facing pencil study of myself as I have done many previously. I decided to tie it in with 'Life and Death' which was the theme I chose to go down within the 'Human Condition'. I had recently been to see the Gerhard Richter Panorama exhibition at the Tate Modern and was inspired by his style in the 'Baader Meinhof' paintings. Therefore I decided to loosely base my self portrait on this set of paintings. To get the same effect of doubt that I saw in the work with his slightly blurred images I gently dragged a squeegee across my self portrait whilst the paint was still wet. I used oil paints on A2 paper.
Some of you will have known how much I have wanted to have a go at fabric printing. Well, I'm nearly all set to embark on that adventure. Louise Snook was at the Sydney Craft & Quilt Show and I. Just. Had. to do the workshop. $30 for 1 1/2 hrs of messy fun. Louise was an inspiring teacher, and I threw myself into it. That's a Kokeshi Doll image that I drew and printed myself!! Pretty simplistic, but I wanted to get as much actual printing experience as possible. I have to get myself a squeegee and I'm off. *squeal*
4am to 12:30pm Tuesday to Saturday, Sanitation
of Food Storage facility, Lift 50 lbs, Run Heavy Floor Squeegee
Machines and Powered Industrial Trucks, $13-$16 per hour
I think this is Squeegee (or is it Luke?) the harbor seal at the National Zoo. Squeegee is receiving a treat for cooperating during a training session and checkup. 11/9/13.
26/02/2026. Ladies European Tour. Ford Women's New South Wales Open, Wollongong Golf Club. 26 February - 1 March. A referee transports squeegees to the greens through the standing water during the first round. Credit: Tristan Jones/ LET
grab shot when the windows of Costa Coffee were being cleaned (we managed to get the window seats for once, yay!)
11/09/2025. Cuxton, UK. The Princess of Wales during a visit to the Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, a family business that specialises in hand designing and screen- printing furnishing fabrics. The Princess spent time with Design Director Tandine Rawkins, and observed how she free-hand sketches all the artwork for every design. Her Royal Highness then moved to the printing room and had the opportunity to take part in screen-printing a design on fabric by pushing coloured dyes through an engraved silk-screen using a squeegee. The Princess also observed the last step in the production process where the printed fabric is fed through a conveyor oven, which heat-fixes the print to the basecloth. Picture by Toby Shepheard / Kensington Palace
After a light dusting of snow last week, it was warm enough to wash the car today in North Carolina.
Very necessary for pushing the ink through the screen and onto whatever you're printing on (paper, fabric, wood, glass etc...).
Drawn and colored 8-30-2012. Location: Germantown, TN. This is the view from my front porch swing. It is a cloudy afternoon and the mosquitoes are abundant. I kept them at bay with Deep Woods Off. I forgot to bring paper towels, so I squeegeed the brush with my fingers.
11/09/2025. Cuxton, UK. The Princess of Wales during a visit to the Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, a family business that specialises in hand designing and screen- printing furnishing fabrics. The Princess spent time with Design Director Tandine Rawkins, and observed how she free-hand sketches all the artwork for every design. Her Royal Highness then moved to the printing room and had the opportunity to take part in screen-printing a design on fabric by pushing coloured dyes through an engraved silk-screen using a squeegee. The Princess also observed the last step in the production process where the printed fabric is fed through a conveyor oven, which heat-fixes the print to the basecloth. Picture by Toby Shepheard / Kensington Palace
come and get a piece
No Coast is a collectively run art studio, event space and consignment store at 1500 W. 17th Street in Pilsen, a few blocks from the 18th Street Pink Line station and accessible by several bus routes. Our screen printing facilities include multiple printing stations with drying racks, pressure washer, light table, UV exposure unit, and some shared screens, scoop coaters and squeegees.
Per-Project Studio Rental is $50 a week. Renters can walk-in during our open hours, or set up an alternative schedule with our staff. Previous screenprinting experience is required. Access to equipment listed above is unrestricted, though it is recommended that you bring your own screens, and required that you bring your own materials (paper, ink, etc).
Monthly Membership is $200-$225 a month, inclusive of utilities (electric, heat, phone/internet) and some shared supplies. Equipment in addition to that listed above includes sewing machines, flat files and personal storage space. Collective members have 24/7 keyed access to the space. Collective responsibilities include participation in group meetings, basic cleanliness/organization, and some volunteer time running the facilities during open hours (can be as little as 1 or 2 shifts a month if your schedule is busy). Members may also use the space to program public events if desired. Long-term members do not need any screenprinting experience and can work in other media as space allows, but should have experience with or willingness to work in a cooperative group environment.
Contact everyone@no-coast.org for information, questions, or to schedule a visit.
Sean begins to wrap a Mustang at the 2010 SGIA Expo in Las Vegas, Nevada on October 13, 2010
A squeegee is an important tool for a graphics installer. When applying heat, the squeegee is used to smooth out all the wrinkles and bubbles.
If you're interested in Lowen Certified training or certification testing for the 3M preferred designation installer visit our website at www.LowenCertified.com
We encountered a very pissed off window cleaner on Bathurst. The guy was protecting his freshly wiped window with hard words and a squeegee. Later on, of the brighter zombies suggested that if he had known about the march, he might have wanted to _follow_ the pack, selling his services in the zombie's wake. He could have made a killing-- sorry. I mean cleaned up-- literally.