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What Is a Barrier Base in Screen Printing? Why UPLC Grey Matters for Hoodie Printing

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UPLC Grey Underbase Print

What Is a Barrier Base in Screen Printing? Why UPLC Grey Matters for Hoodie Printing

What is a Barrier Base? (And Why UPLC Grey Matters for Hoodie Printing)

If you’ve ever had a clean white print turn pink after curing—or worse, after packing—you’ve experienced dye migration.

This isn’t an ink failure.
It’s a fabric chemistry problem.

Polyester and blended garments contain dyes that become mobile when exposed to heat. During curing, these dyes can migrate into the ink film, contaminating the final print.

This is where barrier bases come in.

UPLC Grey Barrier Base printed on AlbaChem black test square.

What is a Barrier Base?

A barrier base is a specialised underbase ink layer designed to prevent dye migration from the garment into the print.

Unlike standard underbases, barrier inks are engineered to:

Provide enhanced bleed resistance
Form a protective layer between fabric and ink
Maintain performance across variable curing temperatures

UPLC Grey Barrier Base is specifically designed for this role, offering excellent bleed resistance across a wide temperature range .

Our newest Barrier Base – low cure with a flexible curing range – between 132°C to 160°C.

Why Hoodie Season Makes This Critical

Hoodies introduce multiple risk factors:

Heavier fabric = more heat required to cure
Polyester blends = higher dye instability
Longer dwell times = increased dye activation

Even low-bleed whites can struggle without a proper barrier layer.

Low cure systems like UPLC are designed to reduce this risk by curing as low as 132°C, helping minimise dye activation while still achieving ink film fusion .

Left – red dye migrated into white print. Right – white print with grey barrier base

How UPLC Grey Barrier Base Works

From a technical standpoint, UPLC Grey Barrier Base works by:

  1. Creating a Physical Barrier

A properly deposited ink layer forms a dense film that slows dye penetration.

  1. Managing Heat Exposure

With a cure range of 132°C–160°C, printers can reduce total thermal stress on the garment .

  1. Supporting Print Structure

It acts as a stable foundation layer, allowing whites and colours to sit on top without contamination.

Recommended Print Approach (From TDS)

For effective dye blocking:

  • Use 34–43 t/cm mesh for adequate ink deposit
  • Print two strokes of barrier base
  • Flash until dry to the touch (not over-flashed)
  • Print white or colours on top using a print–flash–print sequence

This ensures:

  • Proper film build
  • Consistent opacity
  • Maximum dye blocking performance

Production Considerations

  • Pre-shear ink before printing to achieve optimal flow
  • Use medium to low squeegee pressure as the ink shears down
  • Avoid excessive flash temperatures — overheating can increase dye migration risk
  • Cure using a lower temperature + slower belt speed to protect fabric


When You Should Use Barrier Base

You should strongly consider UPLC Grey Barrier Base when printing on:

  • 100% polyester
  • Poly/cotton blends
  • Dye-sublimated garments
  • Fabrics with unstable or unknown dye systems

It is especially useful for high-risk designs like camo or sublimated patterns .

Final Thought: This Isn’t an Upsell — It’s Process Control

Barrier base isn’t about adding cost.
It’s about removing risk.

Failed prints, returns, and reprints cost significantly more than implementing the correct underbase system from the start.

If you’re printing hoodies this season, UPLC Grey Barrier Base should be considered a core part of your production workflow—not an optional extra.

Get in touch with us to refine your workflow or to add UPLC Grey Barrier Base into your ink kit.

Written by the Jones Brothers team.

FAQs

What is the difference between a low bleed ink and a barrier base?

A low bleed ink is designed to resist dye moving through the ink film.

A barrier base is designed to stop dye before it reaches the print layer at all.

👉 Low bleed = resistance
👉 Barrier base = prevention

That’s why low bleed inks can still struggle on high-risk garments without a barrier underneath.

Why isn’t a low bleed white enough on hoodies?

Hoodies—especially poly blends—hold more dye and require more heat to cure.

That combination:

  • increases dye activation
  • increases dwell time
  • increases migration risk

Even a well-formulated low bleed white can be overwhelmed if the dye load is high enough.

👉 That’s where a barrier base becomes necessary.

How does a barrier base actually stop dye migration?

A barrier base works by forming a dense, less permeable ink layer between the fabric and the top print.

This layer:

  • slows or blocks dye movement
  • separates the garment from the visible print layer
  • creates a more stable foundation for whites and colours

👉 It’s a physical and structural solution—not just a chemical one.

Can I cure a barrier base too hot?

Yes—and this is where a lot of printers get caught out.

Excessive heat:

  • increases dye activation in the garment
  • can push dye into the barrier layer
  • reduces the effectiveness of the system

That’s why low cure systems (like UPLC) are important—they allow you to:

👉 achieve cure without over-activating the garment

When should I always use a barrier base?

You should strongly consider it when printing on:

  • 100% polyester
  • poly/cotton blends
  • dye-sublimated garments
  • dark or heavily dyed fabrics

👉 especially for white prints or high-opacity work

If the garment is high-risk or inconsistent, a barrier base moves you from:

  • reacting to problems
    👉 to controlling the outcome

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