What & Why is Dye Sublimation?
Dye Sublimation is a printing process using small heating elements to evaporate pigments from a carrier film, depositing them smoothly onto a substrate. It can transfer a colored dye to a polymer by heat and pressure. As the dye is heated, it turns from a solid to a gas and then bonds with the polymer so transferring the color with it.
Sublimation key ingredients are heat, pressure, and dwell time. When the heating process is completed, the image on the paper has been transferred to the item and has become part of the surface. No surface protection is needed. During the sublimation process, the ¡åpores¡å of the item open up and accept the ink/image. When the item is removed from the heat press, the pores close and the inks revert to a solid state resulting in a permanent, durable image that can not be rubbed or washed off.