I put the paper on a sheet of glass (old mirror), then I spread the
silicone with a stainless steel squeegee from the hardware store. You
can really scrape on the paper to get it as thin as possible. You need
slightly rough paper, like plain office photocopier paper, not inkjet
paper. The roughness will provide little valleys to fill with silicone
while the squeegee rides over the high points. You need a wide
squeegee to cover the whole page else you get a slight line where the
two passes join.
ST
On Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 11:30 PM, buckeyes1997 <buckeyes1997@...> wrote:
> ST
> Do you or can you recall the procedure for making the silicone coated sheets of paper? I tried it but never got the silicone to spread very evenly. That is why I thought the silicone sheets that can be bought from an online vendor might do well. They are also fairly high temp sheets so I dont THINK the printer would melt it.
>
> matt