i think it would melt the foam
An iron.
yes
Class B
It's not safe for residential use because it is quite flammable. Construction grade styrofoam insulation is treated with a flame retardant.
A foam roller might work, but a foam pad is better. Stain is too thin to go on with a regular roller.
transfer
use an iron directly on the transfer
use an iron directly on the transfer
Use liquitex, or iron it on with transfer paperLiquitex
13 Amp My Iron uses this and I learnt this from AS physics on a task sheet
conduction
friend use formula weight of iron sheet = l*b*t* 7.85 where; l => lenght of the sheet b => breadth of the sheet t +> thickness of sheet and 7.85 is taking as constt.
I think they use steel because, the instruments would rust if it was iron & germs would transfer.
Yes, as long as you use caution to avoid excess heat in the areas that your transfer does not cover.
You can use a transfer sheet called Universal Transfer Sheet for both t-shirts and mugs and plate presses. However, I would not recommend it. If you purchase the different types of transfer sheets for each different use, you will be more likely to get a product that is designed specifically for the purpose. This way the differences in the items you are using the transfers on can be accounted for.
Transfer printing is where the ink and paint is applied to an object and then the object is used to transfer the ink to the paper or material. Most printing techniques use the transfer process. You can use engraved plates, lithography, stone, lead type, etc. to transfer the ink, even a rubber roller that picks the ink up from the type sheet and puts it on the paper.
the foam soap was soft on my hands.