Beginners Guide: How To Use Infusible Ink in the Cricut Machine

 Infusible Ink is an exclusive ink transfer product from the Cricut machine. You can use the Cricut Infusible Ink to make bright, colorful designs with the effortless professional finish of various base materials, unlike iron-on vinyl or HTV, which are applied over the base material using a heat-activated adhesive, Infusible Ink transfer fuses with the base material itself. It becomes one with the material – meaning the design will never flake, peel, wrinkle or crack. It is a bit like sublimation but much more effortless. The Infusible Ink sublimes from a strong to a gas and then infuses into the material to form a permanent bond that will not fade.

How does Cricut Infusible Ink work?

Using Infusible Ink is as simple as using Iron-on or heat transfer vinyl. The process is pretty similar, but the results are decidedly different. Here are some easy steps for creating a project with Infusible Ink Sheets.

  1. Select your Infusible Ink sheet and corresponding blank project.
  2. Create designs at the Cricut Design Space app. And then, load the Infusible Ink sheet onto the Cricut machine cutting mat, and use the Cricut machine to cut it. Then, weed out the design.
  3. Lay the Infusible Ink design on a blank project, and apply heat with a Cricut EasyPress or heat press.

And here are the basic steps for creating a project with Infusible Ink Pen.

  1. Select the Cricut Infusible Ink pen and compatible blanks.
  2. Draw design on laser copy paper.
  3. Lay copy paper with the design on blank, and heat with a Cricut EasyPress or heat press.

How to use Cricut Infusible Ink

Here are the main steps how to apply Cricut Infusible Ink Sheets. So, let’s get started.

Step 1. Select Infusible Ink Material and a Compatible Blank

You can cut designs or patterns from Cricut Infusible Ink transfer sheets or create your designs with Cricut Infusible Ink markers and pens.

Step 2. Make the design in the Cricut Design Space

  1. Open Design Space and click on start a new project. You can select a design from the Cricut Access library, upload an SVG cut file, or create your design with the tools on the Canvas screen in Design Space.
  2. Once the design is complete, press on Make It to send it to the mat.
  3. On the finished screen, press the toggle button to Mirror your design.
  4. On the Make screen, choose Infusible Ink from the material settings list. Load the fine-point blade into the machine.

Step 3. Cut out the Infusible Ink Transfer Sheet

  1. Next, you have to load the sheet of Infusible Ink onto the green StandardGrip cutting mat. Tale the Infusible Ink transfer sheet on the mat with the glossy side down and the colored ink side up. You can roll the transfer sheet with a Brayer tool to ensure it adheres entirely to the cutting mat.
  2. Click the Load button to load the cutting mat into the machine. Click the Go button to start the cutting.
  3. When the cut is complete, take the mat off. Invert the mat on a clean work surface, peel the cutting mat away from the Infusible Ink sheet.
  4. Now it is time to beat the design. Begin by folding or rolling the transfer sheet to loosen the cut pieces. You can hear a slight cracking sound as the cut pieces separate don’t worry; this is a good sign.
  5. Keep weeding until you have only your design on the transparent liner sheet. Then, remove the excess transfer sheet. Ensure your hands are always dry and clean, so you don’t accidentally get any oil or lotion on the transfer sheet.

Tips: Weeding sheets of Infusible Ink can be trickier than weeding vinyl. Cricut uses your fingers to weed the transfer sheets, as the sharply demanding hooks can scratch the sheets and cause unwanted ink transfer.

Step 4. Prepare Your Content

Now, prepare your workspace before applying the transfer sheet.

  1. First, set your EasyPress mat on a flat, stable surface. Take your blank project on top of the mat. Then, take a white cardstock piece inside the blank project. Cardstock is to protect the mat and project from bleeding through ink transfer.
  2. Then, use a lint-roller to clear fuzz or fibers from the work surface of the project. Don’t leave this step. Also, if you can’t see any lint, some tiny fibers may interfere with a successful ink transfer.
  3. Next, cover up the clean blank with a sheet of butcher paper. Ensure the butcher’s paper is larger than the design and more significant than the plate of EasyPress.
  4. Preheating the blank is essential to smooth any wrinkles and remove moisture interfering with a successful transfer. Then, preheat the blank as per the Cricut Heat Guide. See the Cricut Heat Guide for recommended heating temperatures and times for the specific projects.

Lastly, remove the heat press and butcher paper, and allow the blanks to cool correctly. Don’t be tempted to apply an Infusible Ink sheet before the blank has properly cooled; you don’t want to risk accidental ink transfer.

visit:cricut.com/setup

Source:https://cricutcomsetupwindows.com/beginners-guide-how-to-use-infusible-ink-in-the-cricut-machine/

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