[0001] The present invention refers to a process for the heat transfer printing of textile
materials fully or partially consisting of natural silk fibers, according to the principles
of the so-called heat transfer printing, from a transfer sheet carrying at least one
dyestuff, at a temperature in the range of from 170° to 230° C, in the absence of
a vacuum or a carrier gas. These principles are for example described in French patents
nos. 1 223 330 and 1 585119.
[0002] It is well known that natural silk has substantially no affinity for dispersion dyestuffs
which are commonly used in heat transfer printing, so that it is not possible to produce
prints having acceptable fastnesses. However, since textile materials and articles
of natural silk or containing mixtures of such fibers, are essential fashion products,
heat transfer printing would bring about outstanding advantages such as flexibility
in design storage, the possibility of an economic production of a valuable design
even in relatively small quantities, the simplicity of the method, the absence of
wash water contamination, the possibility of half-tone dyeing, etc. Furthermore, silk
fabrics are often very light, having weights of as low as 20 g/m
2, which could be printed easily by heat transfer but only very difficultly, if at
all, dyed by conventional liquor dyeing techniques.
[0003] It has already been tried to overcome the lack of affinity mentioned above, in order
to get the silk dyeable by heat transfer printing. A first approach was the chemical
modification of the silk fiber by grafting reactions or by acylation, but these methods
are complex and expensive and do alter the hand and other physical properties of the
silk materials. These methods could therefore not succeed.
[0004] Another possibility of rendering silk materials temporarily more affine to dispersion
dyestuffs was for example disclosed in Japanese patent applications nos. 53-78386
(Toyo Ink Mfg. KK) and 52-66785 (Sumitomo Chemical KK), French patent no. 2 296 537,
and U. K. Patents nos. 2 112 422 (which appears to be a selection from FR-A-2 296
537) and 1 529 199. The method comprises treating a textile material of natural silk
with an aqueous composition, containing certain swelling agents, and then drying the
treated textile material. It is believed that the effect of this pre-treatment consists
in swelling the silk fiber and to maintain the swollen state of the fiber even after
drying, i. e. in its water free condition. Afterwards, a heat transfer printing step
is accomplished, and the remaining swelling agent seems to act as a solvent phase
for the dispersion dyes during the transfer step. Acceptable fastnesses are generally
obtained after a final washing or rinsing of the silk textile material whereby the
swelling agent is eliminated.
[0005] It has further been found that the heat transfer printing of silk which has been
pre-treated as depicted above, namely which contains a swelling or impregnating agent,
for example a polyhydric alcohol, suffers from the disadvantage that the silk strongly
yellows in the heating step during the heat transfer printing, at the temperatures
normally used in heat transfer printing. Attempts to avoid yellowing by reducing the
transfer temperatures to 190° to 200°C have not been successful since the brilliant
shades required in silk printing, are no more attained with the dyestuffs used for
the heat transfer printing of polyester, and furthermore, yellowing is only reduced
but not eliminated.
[0006] Dispersion dyestuffs have become known from U. K. patent no. 2 112 422 which can
be transferred at relatively low temperatures, e. g. at 170° to 180°C, in about 30
to 40 seconds from the transfer sheet to silk fabrics, e. g. C. I. Solvent Blue 36.
However, these dyestuffs are so mobile even at room temperature that they migrate
and recrystallize in the swelling agent used for the silk pre-treatment, namely polyhydric
alcohols or their derivatives, to such an extent that already after a dwell time of
a few hours - such a time lag must normally be accepted before rinsing and cannot
be shortened -, there are perceptible level differences in the originally produced
print design.
[0007] Next to the problems mentioned above, the most important reason why the liquid pretreatment
process taught in the above mentioned patents and patent applications has not had
much commercial success, is that liquid pretreatment is difficult to integrate into
a heat transfer printing process line. Liquid pretreatment has practically always
to be applied at locations different from those where the heat transfer is to be executed,
and generates organisational problems resulting in long delivery times thereby destroying
an important advantage of heat transfer printing over conventional printing.
[0008] It must therefore be concluded that heat transfer printing of silk has only then
a chance of commercial success if a pretreatment process can be found which can be
used by the heat transfer printer with his current and normal equipment, i. e. a heat
transfer printing calender or press.
[0009] EP-A-146 504, published 26 June 1985, describes a one-step heat transfer printing
process which may be applied also to a silk crepe, wherein a transfer sheet carrying
a dyestuff and a dry composition containing epsilon-caprolactam is used for the printing
at a temperature of 180° C.
[0010] The main object of the present invention is to provide a new and useful method for
the transfer printing of pure and mixed silk textile materials which does not suffer
from the above discussed disadvantages and drawbacks.
[0011] Another object of this invention is to provide such a method which, however, allows
to maintain the outstanding advantages of the transfer printing principles.
[0012] Still another object of the invention is to provide such a transfer printing process
which can be carried out in the apparatuses, devices and machines already available
or already installed at a given place such as a factory, thus minimizing capital investment,
and which is economically feasible already with short lengths of silk textile materials
to be printed.
[0013] A further object of the present invention is to develop a heat transfer printing
process avoiding the yellowing of the silk substrate during the transfer heating.
[0014] These and still other objects are attained by the method of this invention which
comprises a dry pre- treatment of the silk textile with an impregnating composition.
[0015] Surprisingly, it has been found that impregnating agents can be applied to natural
silk with a melt transfer method resulting in a strong affinity of the impregnated
silk for subliming dyestuffs. For this application conventional heat transfer equipment,
i. e. calenders and presses, can readily be used.
[0016] The process of the invention is characterized by the following steps:
(1) applying by the method of heat transfer printing from a first transfer sheet,
a dry pre-treatment composition, solid at room temperature and containing at least
one impregnating agent which is heat stable, solid below 60°C and liquid in the range
of from 60° to 200°C, colorless and non-attacking silk, selected from low molecular
nitrogen containing organic substances, and a water soluble, film-forming binder capable
of being transferred to the textile substrate, to the dry said textile material, and
thereafter
(2) heat transfer printing the thus pre-treated textile material with a coloured pattern
from a second transfer sheet, and
(3) rinsing the printed textile material with water.
[0017] The following impregnating agents have proven to be particularly appropriate in the
method of this invention:
isonicotinamide, s-caprolactam, nicotinamide, propylene urea, ethylene urea, glyoxal
mono-urein, urea, 5,5-dimethyl hydantoin, imidazole, 2-methyl imidazole, N-methyl
pyrrolidone, N-hydroxy succinic amide, benzamide, toluol sulfonamide and mixtures
from these substances.
[0018] It will be noted that the above mentioned organic substances are solid at temperatures
below 60° C and liquid in a range between 60 and 200°. Furthermore they contain nitrogen
and are substantially colorless. They must further be stable at the heat transfer
temperatures, and must not attack the silk substrate.
[0019] As a binder in the printing ink, film forming substances must be used which are soluble
in water, because impregnating agent and binder must be capable of being eliminated
by water rinsing from the silk substrate following the heat transfer printing.
[0020] Furthermore, the film forming binder should either have a melting point (or melting
range) between 60° and 200° C, or it should be soluble in the molten impregnating
agent. Hydroxypropyl cellulose brands are a particularly well suited film forming
binder having the above listed necessary properties. Since the melt which forms during
the transfer printing step from impregnating agent and binder, should be as less viscous
as possible, it is preferred to combine the binder with a plasticizer.
[0021] The heat transfer printing of the silk according to this invention is carried out,
as mentioned above, in two steps.
[0022] In the first step, e. g. an unprinted base paper for gravure printing is coated with
a pre-treatment composition comprising a solvent, a binder and an impregnating agent,
in such a manner that a layer containing preferably from 5 to 25 g of impregnating
agent per m
2 of base paper is formed.
[0023] This layer is then heat transferred to the silk substrate by means of a conventional
heat transfer calender or a transfer press at a temperature of about 100° to about
200°C.
[0024] In the second step, a coloured pattern on a transfer paper is heat transfer printed
in the usual way (e. g. 200°C, about 30 sec) onto the thus pre-treated substrate.
[0025] Following this heat transfer printing, the impregnating agent and the binder are
removed from the printed product by rinsing it with water.
[0026] After this step, a product is obtained showing a brilliant print and the characteristic
hand of silk.
[0027] To the coating composition should be added from 0.2 to 5 % of an optical brightener
which is well soluble in aromatic or aliphatic solvents but substantially insoluble
in water, in order to compensate for a possible yellowing of the silk. Such optical
brighteners are proposed for the spin melt dyeing and the cake dyeing of polyester
fibers and are mostly benzoxazole derivatives. Representative members thereof are
the products called "UVITEX OB
I" (Ciba-Geigy), "KODEL
®" (Eastman-Kodak) and "SANDUVOR VSU
* (Sandoz).
[0028] It should further be noticed that there is a fundamental difference between the instant
method and that known from French patent no. 2 277 680 in the transfer printing of
hydrophilic fiber materials. That French patent, page 9, line 31, imperatively calls
for the binder to completely remain on the base paper after the transfer printing
step. It is supposed that the sensibilisation of the hydrophilic fibers should obviously,
in the French patent process, be accomplished by the sublimation of the impregnating
agent whereas, in the instant method, impregnating agent and binder are transferred
together via their melt on the silk. For this reason, only binders with special, outstanding
properties can be used in the present method whereas the French patent expessly mentions
that all binders known from the lacquer and printing ink industry may be used.
[0029] The heat transfer printing step may be carried out in practice as usually; details
may be taken from the publications of the prior art mentioned and discussed above.
[0030] Dyestuffs which may be used are those which can be applied by heat transfer on polyester
substrates, generally dispersion dyestuffs, for example C. I. Disperse red 60, C.
I. Disperse Yellow 54, C. 1. Disperse Blue 331, C. I. Disperse Blue 72, C. I. Disperse
Blue 19, C. I. Disperse Violet 1. The more water insoluble the dyestuffs are, the
better are generally the final washing fastnesses.
[0031] Particularly good penetration is obtained when dyestuffs are used which are capable
of being transferred at a temperature not exceeding 190°C in 30 seconds with substantially
100 % yield from the transfer sheet to the pre-treated silk. In order to solve the
well known problem of the degradation of the print pattern by migration, experiments
were made, and it has been found that the melt impregnating agents listed above do
not form migrating systems with these rapidly subliming dyestuffs, e. g. C. I. Solvent
Blue 36.
[0032] The print pattern of the heat transfer prints thus obtained does not degrade until
eight weeks when kept at a temperature below 40°C. At this time at the latest, the
rinsing or washing should be effected. It will be sufficient to rinse the fabric several
times in lukewarm water of 40° C.
[0033] The use of a trichromies which contain as a blue dyestuff 1,4-diisopropylamino anthraquinone,
as a red dyestuff 1-amino-2-chloro-4-hydroxyanthraquinone (also 1-amino-2-bromo-4-hydroxyanthraquinone
can be used), and as a yellow dyestuff the product having the formula

should specially be emphasized.
[0034] However, they are the migrating dyestuffs, and in order to keep down the migration,
the cited trichromies should only be used together with silk substrates having been
pre-treated with one of the above described impregnating agents.
[0035] The dyestuffs to be used are typically sparingly water soluble. When the pretreatment
of silk fabric has been made with highly water soluble impregnating agents, rinsing
with cold water is sufficient. With benzamide and toluene sulfonamide, warm rinsing
is preferred. When surfactants are added in order to improve the wetting of the textile
materials, only such agents can be used which do not render the dyestuffs more soluble.
After the rinsing step, the textile material is dried.
[0036] Another possibility to obtain strong and deep prints and a high penetration is to
use transfer papers printed with relatively very high dyestuff amounts. This feature
has not been obvious since deep shades normally impair the rubbing fastnesses (see
e. g. BASF Publication CTE-072 d, page 10). It has surprisingly been found that this
was not the case. On the contrary, it has been found that dyestuffs known for the
heat transfer printing on polyester, namely C. I. Disperse Red 60, C. I. Disperse
Yellow 54 and C. I. Disperse Blue 331, provide when printed on silk by heat transfer,
the standard type depth of 2/1 with the same textile fastnesses as if transfer sheets
would be used containing as much dyestuffs as 1 to 2.5 g/m
2, preferably 1.5 g/m
2. When these transfer sheets are prepared by gravure printing using a normal gravure,
this value can be obtained with a printing ink containing about 15 % by weight of
dyestuffs. It should be noted that the normal heat transfer printing of polyester
uses typically dyestuff amounts not exceeding 0.75 g/m
2.
[0037] The amounts of dyestuff mentioned above are referred to the the square meter of printed
area, i. e. those surface regions are not taken into account which are free from dyestuffs.
It is now especially surprising that the improvement of shade depth is also obtained
even on extremely light-weight silk qualities having a weight of less then 50 g/m
2, where already the conventional dyestuff concentrations of about 0.75 g/m
2 will result in a shade depth which is identical on both sides of the fabric.
[0038] The man skilled in the art could not expect that an available dyestuff amount being
about twice the normal amount would lead to this surprising results since already
the normal amount of dyestuff will leave a dyestuff residue on the transfer sheet
after the heat transfer printing.
[0039] The exact choice of the method parameters, specially the dyestuff available on the
transfer sheet, will depend upon the weight and the construction of the silk fabric
and the effects sought for. Generally, the results are outstanding if the dyestuff
available will be 50 to 100 % higher than for the conventional heat transfer printing
on polyester.
[0040] Still more brillant shades and generally good fastnesses are obtained with the following
dyestuffs: C. I. Solvent Yellow 160, C. I. Disperse Red 55, C. I. Disperse Blue 56
and C. I. Disperse Blue 60.
[0041] It should be expected that these dyestuffs could not be used for the heat transfer
printing of silk since they are only slowly subliming and must be transferred on polyester
at 210°C as long as 60 seconds (see, i. e., for C. I. Disperse Blue 60: "Transfer
printing of Polyester", Technical Headlines BR 1107, Yorkshire Chemicals Limited,
Leeds, U. K.). Under these transfer conditions, a strong yellowing of the silk is
observed even when swelling agents are absent, and the penetration of the textile
material by the dyestuff is not sufficient.
[0042] It has surprisingly be found that, when these dyestuffs are mixed with other dyestuffs
commercially used for the heat transfer printing of polyester, namely C. I. Disperse
Yellow 54, C. I. Disperse Red 60 and C. I. Disperse Blue 331, a dyestuff system is
obtained which gives under transfer conditions of 200 to 205°C at 40 seconds prints
having an excellent penetration, good brilliance and outstanding fastnesses.
[0043] It has been especially surprising that the dyestuff C. I. Solvent Yellow 160, which
is giving on natural silk prints of high brilliance but of a very bad light fastness
(note 2), provides prints with good brilliance and a good light fastness (note 4.5),
when the printing ink for making the transfer sheet contains about 30 to 70 % of this
dyestuff, preferably about 50 %, together with 70 to 30 %, preferably about 50 %,
of the dyestuff C. I. Disperse Yellow 54.
[0044] The transfer sheets which are typically made of paper, can be obtained in the well
known conventional manner. This feature of the present method is a described per se
in the already mentioned literature.
[0045] The method of this invention has the additional advantage that the great variety
of pattern and design collections already existing at the transfer printers' can be
used without any additional work or modifications.
[0046] The following examples are given to illustrate and explain in further details this
invention and are not construed to limit it in any way. If not otherwise indicated,
all percentages and parts refer to the weight. All numeric amounts and ranges, temperatures
included, are to be understood as approximate values.
[0047] Where gravure printing is mentioned, other printing methods may as well be used such
as offset or screen printing.
Example 1
[0048] A coating composition is prepared in a ball mill in which 39 parts of nicotinic acid
amide and 6 parts of hydroxypropyl cellulose of the type "Klucel E
Ø", of Hercules Inc., dissolved in a mixture of 33 parts of toluene and 22 parts of
ethanol, wherein 0.5 part of UVITEX OB has been previously dissolved, are charged.
When all ingredients are well distributed, the so obtained coating mass is used to
coat a base paper for transfer printing, having a unit weight of 60 g/m
2, in an amount giving after drying a quantity of nicotinic acid amide of 15 g/m
2.
[0049] This layer is now transferred in a conventional transfer printing calender on a silk
fabric at 140° C and during a contact time of about 20 seconds.
[0050] On the so pre-treated textile material, a heat transfer printing paper is transferred
at 200° C during a contact time of 30 seconds. After the heat transfer printing, the
silk is rinsed with lukewarm water and finally dried. A brilliant print having the
typical silk hand is obtained.
Example 2
[0051] A silk fabric having a weight of 70 g/m
2, desized and bleached as usual, is pretreated by dry-sensibilisation as shown in
Example 1.
[0052] The pretreated fabric is covered with a transfer paper having a weight of 60 g/m
2 which has been printed by gravure printing with inks containing as a blue dyestuff
1,4-diisopropylamino anthraquinone, as a red dyestuff 1-amino-2-chloro-4-hydroxyanthraquinone
(also 1-amino-2-bromo-4-hydroxyanthraquinone may be used), and as a yellow dyestuff
a compound of formula

The transfer printing is effected in about 30 seconds at 170°C.
[0053] A brilliant print with good fastnesses and excellent penetration of dyestuffs is
obtained. There is no yellowing of any remaining white basic bottom shade on uncolored
area regions.
[0054] Within two months after the transfer printing, the impregnating agent is rinsed from
the fabric with water of 40° C and the fabric is dried on a tenter frame.
Example 3
[0055] A coating composition is prepared in a ball mill in which are charges 40 parts of
benzamide and 5 parts of hydroxypropyl cellulose of the type "Klucel E", of Hercules
Inc., dissolved in a mixture of 30 parts of toluene, 20 parts of isopropanol, 10 parts
of ethyl diglycol and 17 parts of methyl ethyl ketone, wherein 0.5 part of UVITEX
OB has been previously dissolved. When all ingredients are well dispersed, the so
obtained coating mass is used to coat a base paper for heat transfer printing, having
a unity weight of 60 g/m
2, in an amount giving after drying an amount of benzamide of 15 g/m
2. This layer is now transferred in a conventional heat transfer printing calender
on a silk fabric, quality "chiffon", desized and bleached as usual having a weight
of 25 g/m
2.
[0056] The silk fabric thus pre-treated is covered with a transfer paper having a weight
of 40 g/m
2 which has been printed by gravure printing with a printing ink containing the dyestuffs
C. I. Disperse Red 60, C. I. Disperse Yellow 54 and C. I. Disperse Blue 331.
[0057] The transfer is made at 30 seconds at 205° C.
[0058] After transfer the silk is rinsed with lukewarm water and finally dried.
[0059] A brilliant print having a good fastnesses and a good resolution is obtained which
could not be realized on an material having such a low weight, with conventional printing
methods. The penetration of the fabric by the dyestuffs is so deep that the upper
and the reverse sides show substantially the same intensity.
[0060] The man skilled in the art will be aware that there are numerous variations and modification
which may be put forward to the process and the other subjects of this invention,
which are thus only limited by the scope of the appending claims.
1. A process for the heat transfer printing of textile materials partially or fully
consisting of natural silk fibers, from a transfer sheet carrying at least one dyestuff,
at a temperature in the range of from 170° to 230°C in the absence of a vacuum or
a carrier gas, characterized by the following steps:
(1) applying by the method of heat transfer printing from a first transfer sheet,
a dry pre-treatment composition, solid at room temperature and containing at least
one impregnating agent which is heat stable, solid below 60°C and liquid in the range
of from 60° to 200°C, colorless and non-attacking silk, selected from low molecular
nitrogen containing organic substances, and a water soluble, film-forming binder capable
of being transferred to the textile substrate, to the dry said textile material, and
thereafter
(2) heat transfer printing the thus pre-treated textile material with a coloured pattern
from a second transfer sheet, and
(3) rinsing the printed textile material with water.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said dry pre-treatment composition further contains
at least one optical brightening agent being soluble in aromatic and/or aliphatic
solvents but at most sparingly soluble in water.
3. The method of claim 1 or 2 wherein said impregnating agent is selected from e-caprolactam,
nicotinamide, isonicotinamide, propylene urea, ethylene urea, glyoxal mono-urein,
urea, 5,5-dimethyl hydantoin, imidazole, 2-methyl imidazole, N-methyl pyrrolidone,
N-hydroxy succinic amide, benzamide, toluene sulfonamide, and mixtures from these
substances.
4. The method of claim 1 or 2 wherein a transfer sheet is used in step (2) which carries,
in order to produce highly brilliant prints having good fastnesses, from 1 to 2,5
g of dyestuff per sq-meter of printed surface area preferably about 1,5 g/m2.
5. The method of claim 1 or 2 wherein dyestuff are used in step (2) which are capable
of being transferred with a yield of practically 100 % from the transfer sheet to
the pre-treated textile material during 30 seconds at temperatures not in excess to
190°.
6. The method of claims 1 or 2 wherein the pre-treatment composition in step (1) comprises
5 to 25 g of impregnating agent per m2 of the first transfer sheet.
7. The method of any one of claims 2 to 6 wherein the pre-treatment composition in
step (1) contains from 0, 2 to 5 % of an optical brightener.
8. A method according to claim 1 wherein said first transfer sheet is a transfer base
paper which is coated in a preliminary step with a dispersion of said impregnating
agent and said binder in a liquid containing a water insoluble organic solvent.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein said dispersion further contains a soluble optical
brightening agent.
1. Verfahren zum Wärmetransferdruck von Textilmaterialien, die teilweise oder vollständig
aus natürlichen Seidenfasern bestehen, mit Hilfe eines Transferblattes, welches mindestens
einen Farbstoff trägt, und bei einer Temperatur im Gebiet von 170° bis 230°C in Abwesenheit
von Vakuum oder Trägergas, gekennzeichnet durch die folgenden Schritte:
(1) Aufbringen auf das trockene genannte Textilmaterial eines trockenen Vorbehandlungsmittels
nach der Methode des Wärmetransferdruckes von einem ersten Transferblatt, wobei das
Vorbehandlungsmittel bei Zimmertemperatur fest ist und mindestens ein Imprägniermittel
enthält, das wärmestabil, unterhalb 60° C fest und im Gebiet von 60° und 200°C flüssig
ist, farblos ist und Seide nicht angreift und aus niedermolekularen stickstoffhaltigen
organischen Substanzen ausgewählt ist, sowie ein wasserlösliches, filmbildendes Bindemittel,
welches auf das Textilsubstrat transferbar ist, und danach
(2) Bedrucken des so vorbehandelten Textilmaterials nach dem Wärmetransferdruck mit
einem farbigen Muster von einem zweiten Transferblatt, und
(3) Spülen des bedruckten Textilmaterials mit Wasser.
2. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, worin das genannte trockene Vorbehandlungsmittel weiterhin
mindestens einen optischen Aufheller enthält, der in aromatischen und/oder aliphatischen
Lösungsmitteln löslich, jedoch höchstens spurenweise in Wasser löslich ist.
3. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, worin das genannte Imprägniermittel unter folgenden
Substanzen ausgewählt wird: E-Caprolactam, Nicotinamid, Isonicotinamid, Propylenharnstoff,
Ethylenharnstoff, Glyoxalmonourein, Harnstoff, 5,5-Dimethylhydantoin, Imidazol, 2-Methyl-Imidazol,
N-Methylpyrrolidon, N-Hydroxysuccinamid, Benzamid, Toluolsulfonamid und Gemischen
dieser Substanzen.
4. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, worin ein Transferblatt in Stufe (2) verwendet
wird, welches zwecks Erzeugung hochbrillianter Drucke mit guten Eigenschaften 1 bis
2,5 g Farbstoff pro Quadratmeter bedruckter Fläche, vorzugsweise etwa 1,5 g/m2 trägt.
5. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, worin Farbstoffe in Stufe (2) verwendet werden,
die mit einer Ausbeute von praktisch 100 % vom Transferblatt auf das vorbehandelte
Textilmaterial in der Zeit von 30 Sekunden bei Temperaturen nicht oberhalb 190°C übertragbar
sind.
6. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, worin das Vorbehandlungsmittel in Stufe (1) 5
bis 25 g Imprägniermittel pro m2 des ersten Transferblattes enthält.
7. Verfahren nach einem der Ansprüche 2 bis 6, worin das Vorbehandlungsmittel in Stufe
(1) 0,2 bis 5 % eines optischen Aufhellers enthält.
8. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, worin das genannte erste Transferblatt ein Transferpapier
ist, welches in einer Vorstufe mit einer Dispersion des genannten Imprägniermittels
und genannten Binders in einer Flüssigkeit beschichtet wird, welche ein wasserunlösliches
organisches Lösungsmittel enthält.
9. Verfahren nach Anspruch 8, worin die genannte Dispersion weiterhin einen löslichen
optischen Aufheller enthält.
1. Procédé d'impression par transfert à chaud de matières textiles consistant en partie
ou totalement de fibres de soie naturelle, à partir d'une feuille de transfert portant
un colorant au moins, à une température comprise entre 170° et 230°C en l'absence
d'un vide ou d'un véhicule gazeux, caractérisé par les étapes suivantes:
(1) on applique à la matière textile sèche une composition de prétraitement à sec
par la méthode de la thermoimpression à partir d'une première feuille de transfert,
la dite composition étant solide à température ambiante et contenant au moins un agent
d'imprégnation thermiquement stable, solide au-dessous de 60° C et liquide entre 60°
et 200° C, incolore et n'attaquant pas la soie, choisi parmi les substances organiques
azotées à bas poids moléculaire, ainsi qu'un liant filmogène soluble à l'eau et capable
d'être transféré sur le substrat textile; ensuite
(2) on imprime par transfert à chaud sur la matière textile ainsi prétraitée un dessin
coloré à partir d'une seconde feuille de transfert, et
(3) on rince la matière textile imprimée avec de l'eau.
2. Procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la dite composition de prétraitement
à chaud contient également au moins un azurant optique soluble dans des solvants aromatiques
et/ou aliphatiques mais au plus faiblement soluble dans l'eau.
3. Procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel l'agent d'imprégnation est choisi
parmi le E-caprolactame, le nicotinamide, l'isonicotinamide, la propylène urée, l'éthylène
urée, la glyoxal mono-uréine, l'urée, la 5,5-diméthyl-hydantoine, l'imidazole, le
2-méthyl-imidazole, la 2-méthyl-pyrrolidone, le N-hydroxy- succinimide, le benzamide,
le toluène sulfonamide, et des mélanges de ces substances.
4. Procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel on utilise dans l'étape (2)
une feuille de transfert comprenant, afin de produire des impressions fortement brillantes
et ayant de bonnes solidités, de 1 à 2,5 g de colorant par mètre carré de surface
imprimée, de préférence environ 1,5 g/m2.
5. Procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel on utilise dans l'étape (2)
des colorants qui sont transférés avec un rendement de pratiquement 100 %, de la feuille
de transfert à la matière textile prétraitée au cours de 30 seconds et à des températures
ne dépassant pas 190°C.
6. Procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel la composition de prétraitement
de l'étape (1) comprend de 5 à 25 g d'agent d'imprégnation par m2 de la première feuille de transfert.
7. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications 2 à 6, dans lequel la composition
de prétraitement de l'étape (1) contient de 0,2 à 5 % d'un azurant optique.
8. Procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel la dite première feuille de transfert
est un papier de base qui est revêtu, dans une étape préliminaire, d'une dispersion
comprenant le dit agent d'imprégnation et le dit liant dans un liquide contenant un
solvant organique insoluble dans l'eau.
9. Procédé selon la revendication 8, dans lequel la dite dispersion contient également
un azurant optique soluble.