Black plastisol ink is a PVC-based screen printing ink, pigmented with carbon black, that sits on top of the fabric and cures to a flexible film at 320°F. It’s the workhorse color in every print shop — the one you’ll burn through faster than any other on the rack. Get the black right and most of your job runs clean. Get it wrong and you’ll be scraping fibers off your squeegee all afternoon.
This guide covers what black plastisol is, how to print and cure it, how it stacks up against water-based and discharge, and which blacks we’d reach for depending on the shirt and the job. We make ink in New Jersey, so the recommendations here come from actual press time — not a marketing deck.
What is black plastisol ink?
Plastisol ink is a suspension of PVC (polyvinyl chloride) resin particles in a plasticizer. It doesn’t dry by evaporation like water-based ink — it cures by heat. When the ink film hits 320°F throughout, the PVC particles fuse with the plasticizer and form a flexible, durable plastic film on the fabric.
Black plastisol is that same chemistry, pigmented with carbon black. Carbon black is opaque, cheap, and lightfast, which is why black plastisol is the most forgiving color in the rack: it covers well on dark and light garments, prints through low and high mesh counts, and holds detail without a lot of fight.
What’s plastisol ink made of?
Four components, in rough order of volume:
- PVC resin — the plastic particles that form the cured film.
- Plasticizer — usually a phthalate or phthalate-free oil that softens the PVC and lets the particles fuse.
- Pigment — carbon black for black; other pigments for color inks.
- Additives — viscosity modifiers, wetting agents, thixotropes, sometimes low-cure catalysts.
Plastisol is shelf-stable. As long as it stays under about 90°F, an unopened gallon will sit on your shelf for years and print fine. That’s a real cost advantage over water-based, which has a clock on it from the day it’s mixed.
How black plastisol works on press
Plastisol works because it sits on top of the shirt instead of dyeing the fibers. You flood the screen, pull a squeegee stroke, lift the screen, and the ink transfers to the garment. Then it gets cured — either in a conveyor dryer or under a flash and a heat press.
A few specifics that matter for black specifically:
- Mesh count: 156 to 230 for standard black on cotton. Go higher (230–305) for fine halftones and detail. Lower (110–125) only if you’re trying to lay down a heavy block on dark fleece or athletic wear.
- Squeegee: 70 durometer is the default. 60 if you want to push more ink through low mesh, 80 if you’re chasing crisp edges through high mesh.
- Off-contact: 1/16” to 1/8” off the platen. Too close and you’ll get tail-end smearing.
- Flood stroke: light flood, firm print. A heavy flood with low-mesh black will load too much ink and clog detail.
Black is also the most common color for an underbase reversal — printing a black layer on a light shirt to create depth before knocking in colors. Standard general-purpose black handles this fine without needing a specialty product.
How to cure plastisol ink (including with a heat press)
Curing is where most black plastisol failures actually happen. The ink film has to reach 320°F all the way through — not just on the surface. A laser temp gun reading the top of the ink isn’t the whole story; you want a donut probe or a temp strip on the fabric under the ink.
Conveyor dryer cure
Standard plastisol cures at 320°F for roughly 60–90 seconds of dwell time at temperature. Set the dryer for 350°F air temp to give yourself headroom, and run a wash test from every new ink/shirt combo before you commit a 500-piece order to it.
Curing plastisol ink with a heat press
A heat press will cure plastisol if you do it right. Two methods:
- Direct cure with a Teflon sheet: 320°F for 35–45 seconds, with the press hovering just off the print (not pressing hard). A hard press will flatten the ink and dull the finish.
- Two-stage cure: flash the print first to gel it, then finish under the heat press at 320°F for 30 seconds.
Heat-press curing works fine for small runs, transfers, and one-off samples. For production volume, you want a conveyor.
Low cure black for poly and performance
If you’re printing on 100% polyester or performance fabric, standard 320°F plastisol will dye-migrate — the dye in the shirt sublimates and bleeds up into the ink, turning your black print rust-brown or your white print pink. The fix is a low-cure ink that fully cures at 270°F.
Our Extreme 270° Low Cure Plastisol Ink holds up to performance fabrics and synthetic blends without scorching the dye. It’s the version of black we’d run on dri-fit jerseys, soft-hand poly tees, and anything with a high-stretch synthetic content.
Plastisol ink vs water-based ink
This is the question that comes up every week. The short answer: they print different prints, and the right one depends on the job.
| Feature | Plastisol | Water-based |
|---|---|---|
| Cure temp | 320°F (270°F low-cure) | 300–320°F, plus air dry |
| Hand feel | Sits on top, plastic feel | Soaks in, soft “no-feel” print |
| Opacity on darks | Excellent | Poor without discharge or underbase |
| Shelf life | Years | 6–12 months once mixed |
| Cleanup | Plastisol screen wash | Water and screen opener |
| Detail at low mesh | Holds well | Tends to dry in screen |
| Best for | Spot color, halftones, dark garments | Soft-hand prints, light garments, retail feel |
| Worst for | Performance fabric without low-cure | Quick runs, dark garments without discharge |
Plastisol is the default in commercial print shops because it’s forgiving, opaque, and storage-stable. Water-based wins when the customer wants a vintage soft-hand print or a retail-grade fashion feel. Most working shops keep both on hand and pick by job.
Discharge ink vs plastisol
Discharge is a third option that gets lumped in. It’s a water-based ink that uses a zinc-formaldehyde-sulfoxylate (ZFS) activator to chemically remove the dye from the cotton and replace it with pigment. The print is in the shirt, not on it.
- Use plastisol when you need opaque coverage on any garment color and don’t want to mess with activator chemistry.
- Use discharge when you want a soft-hand print on dark 100% cotton and the garment is dischargeable (some dyes resist it).
- Don’t use discharge on poly, blends over 50% synthetic, or unknown dye lots — it won’t work consistently.
Specialty black plastisol inks
Standard black covers 90% of orders. The other 10% is where the specialty blacks earn their shelf space.
Black shimmer / metallic black
For fashion prints, premium merch, and anything that needs a little catch in the light, a metallic black gives you a low-key sparkle without going full glitter. Our Black Shimmer Plastisol Ink prints through 110–156 mesh and cures at standard 320°F. We use mica-based shimmer particles, so it holds up to wash cycles without flaking.
Stretch black for performance fabric
Athletic apparel, leggings, and stretchy poly need an ink that flexes with the garment. Standard plastisol will crack on a 100% spandex sleeve after a dozen wash cycles. Our Stretch Plastisol Ink is formulated for high-stretch synthetics — black mixes well into the base if you’re not buying it pre-pigmented.
Bleed-resistant black for 50/50 blends
50/50 cotton-poly blends are sneaky. They look like cotton until you cure them and the poly side starts migrating dye into your print. For black this is less of a visible issue than for white, but the structural integrity of the print still suffers. Bleed-resistant plastisol uses a poly-blocking resin that locks the print in place.
Low-cure black
Covered above — 270°F cure for performance polyester and heat-sensitive garments.
Black for plastisol transfers
If you’re making plastisol heat transfers instead of printing direct-to-garment, you want a specific transfer-grade ink. It’s formulated to release cleanly from the transfer paper under heat-press conditions. Standard direct-print black will work in a pinch but won’t release as predictably across hundreds of transfers.
Best black plastisol ink — what we’d reach for
We make ink, so we’re going to lead with what we make. We carry authorized brands too, and we’ll be honest about when one of those is a better fit.
For general cotton printing
Total Ink Solutions All Purpose Plastisol Ink in black. Prints through 156–230 mesh, cures at 320°F, handles cotton and most cotton-rich blends. This is the gallon that should live on your shelf if you’re a one-press shop running mixed work.
For 100% cotton high-detail work
General Purpose Plastisol Ink Colors For 100% Cotton. The general-purpose line is creamy, prints through 230+ mesh without much fight, and holds halftones well. For shops running detailed cotton work, this is the better pick than the all-purpose.
For poly and performance
Extreme 270° Low Cure Plastisol Ink. Cures at 270°F so you don’t scorch poly dye. Black is the easiest color to get away with on poly even with standard ink — but the moment you add a second color or print on a bright dye lot, low-cure earns its keep.
For 50/50 blends with bleed risk
Bleed Resistant Plastisol Ink For 50/50 Cotton/Poly Blends. Use this when you don’t know the garment’s dye behavior — better to print bleed-resistant on a blend that doesn’t need it than to print standard on one that does.
For stretch and performance synthetics
Stretch Plastisol Ink For 100% Polyester & Performance Fabrics.
Authorized brands we carry
We also stock Wilflex, Union Ink, Rutland, International Coatings, and Ecotex plastisol. Each has a reason to exist in the right shop:
- Wilflex — strong in athletic and specialty effects; their Epic series is a go-to for many shops.
- Union Ink — Mixopake and Plastisol Plus are workhorse general-purpose lines.
- Rutland — known for NPT (no-phthalate) blacks and underbases.
- International Coatings — solid for athletic and direct-print blacks.
- Ecotex — phthalate-free options across the line.
If you’re running a high-volume contract shop already on a specific brand’s color system, we’ll match what you need. If you’re starting fresh or trying to bring ink cost down, the house brand will run cleaner against the price.
White plastisol — the other color you need
You can’t talk about black plastisol without mentioning white. They’re the two highest-volume colors in any shop, and white is harder to get right.
For best white plastisol ink, we’d point to:
- Bleed Resistant 5-Star Bright White CQ Plastisol Ink — the brightest white we make, with bleed resistance built in. This is the white for one-hit prints on 50/50.
- General Purpose White Plastisol Ink – 100% Cotton — for 100% cotton work where you don’t need bleed blocking.
- All Purpose Plastisol Ink – White — flexible across cotton, poly, and blends.
- Extreme 270° Low Cure White — when you need a white that won’t migrate on hot poly.
Plastisol ink thinner and reducer
Black plastisol gets thick. Cold shop, old gallon, bottom of the bucket — at some point you need to thin it. The wrong way is to add water (you can’t — plastisol is oil-based). The right way is to use a plastisol ink reducer or curable reducer.
- Curable reducer — softens viscosity without affecting cure. Add 1–3% by weight, stir thoroughly.
- Soft-hand additive — reduces ink film thickness and softens the feel of the print. Useful for over-pigmented blacks that print plasticky.
- Never use mineral spirits, paint thinner, or kerosene. They’ll soften the ink but ruin the cure.
For thinning, start small. 1% of curable reducer makes a noticeable difference. 3% is about the upper limit before you start hurting opacity.
Other plastisol colors worth knowing
While we’re on the subject, a few specialty colors that come up in the cluster:
- Neon green plastisol — high-visibility safety prints and fashion. Requires a white underbase on dark garments because neons are translucent.
- Metallic gold plastisol — our Metallic 24K Gold Plastisol Ink is a bronze/gold pigmented with mica. Print through 86–110 mesh; the metallic particles are too big for finer mesh.
- Glitter plastisol — coarse glitter suspended in a clear base. Print through 40–60 mesh and expect to clean the screen often.
- Reflective plastisol — contains tiny glass beads. Used for safety apparel; needs a clear adhesive base and the beads applied separately for true retroreflectivity.
- Pink shimmer — like Pink Shimmer Plastisol Ink, a mica-pigmented metallic pink for fashion work.
Troubleshooting black plastisol
The complaints we hear most often, and what’s usually causing them.
Print is dull or cracks after one wash
Undercured. The ink film never hit 320°F throughout. Raise your dryer temp, slow the belt, or both. Test with a temp strip — don’t trust the dryer’s panel reading.
Black looks faded or gray
Underprinted. Either your mesh is too high (the ink film is too thin), or you’re not laying down enough ink on the stroke. Drop to 156 mesh or print two hits with a flash between.
Ink builds up on the squeegee blade and skips
Ink is too thick. Add 1% curable reducer and stir thoroughly. If the shop is below 70°F, warm the ink to room temp before printing — cold plastisol prints terribly.
Print feels rough or sandy
Pigment is settling or the ink hasn’t been mixed properly. Run it through a plastisol ink mixer before printing. We carry plastisol ink mixers attachments if you need one.
Ink bleeds at the edges on poly
Dye migration. Switch to low-cure black at 270°F or run a poly-blocker underbase.
Print pinholes after curing
Lint or dust in the ink, or moisture in the shirt. Cover ink buckets when not in use, and pre-dry shirts if they’re coming from a humid warehouse.
Black looks brown
Either dye migration from a colored garment, or undercure. Test both — the fix depends on which it is.
Frequently asked questions
What is plastisol ink?
Plastisol ink is a PVC-based screen printing ink that cures at 320°F to form a flexible plastic film on the fabric. It doesn’t dry by air or evaporation — it has to reach cure temperature to set. It’s the most common ink in commercial screen printing because it’s opaque, forgiving, and shelf-stable for years.
Is Speedball ink plastisol?
Some Speedball inks are plastisol, but most of their lineup is water-based or acrylic. Their Fabric Screen Printing Ink is water-based; they do offer a separate plastisol line. If you’re working a commercial press, the Speedball plastisol line is on the hobbyist end — fine for learning, not built for production volume.
How do you cure plastisol ink without a conveyor dryer?
A heat press will cure plastisol at 320°F for 35–45 seconds, with a Teflon sheet between the press and the print to avoid flattening the ink. Hover the press just above the garment rather than pressing hard. Flash-curing alone isn’t enough — flash gels the ink but doesn’t fully cure it.
What’s the difference between plastisol and water-based ink?
Plastisol sits on top of the fabric as a plastic film; water-based ink soaks into the fibers and dyes them. Plastisol is more opaque, more forgiving on dark garments, and has a years-long shelf life. Water-based has a softer hand feel, prints better on light garments, and has a 6–12 month shelf life once activated.
Can plastisol ink be used on polyester?
Yes, but you need a low-cure plastisol that fully cures at 270°F instead of 320°F. Standard plastisol can scorch polyester dye and cause migration — the dye sublimates into your print and discolors it. Low-cure inks like our Extreme 270° line are formulated specifically for poly and performance fabrics.
What mesh count works best for black plastisol?
156 to 230 mesh for standard black on cotton. Go to 110–125 mesh for heavy ink deposit on dark fleece or athletic wear. Push up to 230–305 mesh for fine halftones and detail work. Black is forgiving across the range — start at 156 and adjust based on the print.
How long does plastisol ink last on a shirt?
A properly cured plastisol print will survive 50+ industrial wash cycles without significant fading or cracking. We’ve seen Total Ink prints come back from customer testing after 80+ washes still legible. The failure point is almost always undercure, not the ink itself — get it to 320°F throughout and it lasts.
Can you mix plastisol ink colors?
Yes. Plastisol pigments mix freely as long as they’re the same base type (PVC). You can mix black into a color to deepen it, or thin black with a clear base to make a transparent gray. Mixing different brands is fine if they’re both standard plastisol — avoid mixing low-cure with standard, or phthalate with phthalate-free, since the cure chemistry differs.
What is low-cure plastisol ink?
Low-cure plastisol cures fully at 270°F instead of the standard 320°F. It uses a different catalyst that lets the PVC fuse at lower temps, which prevents dye migration on polyester and reduces scorching on heat-sensitive fabrics. Use it for performance wear, poly jerseys, and any garment where standard cure causes color shift.
What’s a plastisol ink screen print transfer?
A plastisol transfer is a print made on release paper instead of directly on the garment. You print and gel the ink on transfer paper, then heat-press it onto the shirt later. It lets you batch-produce prints in advance and apply them on demand — useful for hat printing, sleeve prints, and short-run custom work where setup time on the press isn’t worth it.
Is plastisol ink toxic?
Standard plastisol contains phthalates as plasticizers, which are regulated for children’s apparel (CPSIA in the US). For adult apparel, standard plastisol is safe to print and wear. If you’re printing children’s clothing under 12 years, use a phthalate-free or non-PVC alternative. We carry both standard and phthalate-free options.
How do I store plastisol ink?
Keep plastisol between 65°F and 90°F in a sealed bucket, away from direct sunlight and heat sources. Below 65°F it gets too thick to print well; above 90°F it can start to partially cure in the bucket. Stir before each use if it’s been sitting more than a few weeks — pigments settle.
That’s the working knowledge on black plastisol — what it is, how to print it, how to cure it, and what to reach for when the standard gallon doesn’t fit the job. If you’re not sure which black makes sense for the shirts you’re running this week, call us. We answer the phone, we mix the ink, and the name on the bucket is the same name on the door.
Family-owned, made in New Jersey, and we’d rather talk through your job than sell you the wrong gallon.