Home

transferdruk

Transferdruk, meaning transfer printing, is a printing method in which a design is transferred from an intermediate carrier onto a final substrate. The carrier can be a decal sheet, a printed film, or a relief engraved plate, and the transfer is usually achieved by moisture, pressure, or heat. This technique enables detailed and multicolored patterns to be reproduced across large quantities.

In ceramics and porcelain, transferdruk is most closely associated with ceramic decals. A pattern is first

Transferdruk is also used for textiles, glass, and metal objects. In heat transfer applications, a colored design

Historically, transfer printing gained prominence in the 18th and 19th centuries as a means to produce intricate

printed
or
engraved
on
a
decal
sheet
with
glaze-like
enamels,
then
dried.
The
decal
is
soaked
in
water,
released
from
its
paper
backing,
and
applied
to
the
unfired
or
already
glazed
surface
of
a
ceramic
item.
After
firing,
the
decoration
fuses
with
the
glaze,
becoming
durable
and
part
of
the
surface.
This
process
allowed
complex
patterns
to
be
widely
distributed
and
used
on
dinnerware,
tiles,
and
ornamental
wares.
is
printed
on
a
carrier
and
then
transferred
to
fabric
or
other
substrates
using
heat
and
pressure.
In
glass
and
metal
applications,
engraved
plates
or
films
carry
the
design
and
facilitate
mass
production
of
repeated
motifs.
designs
at
scale,
particularly
on
ceramics.
Over
time,
it
complemented
and
gradually
yielded
to
other
methods
such
as
screen
printing,
lithography,
and
digital
textile
printing,
though
it
remains
an
important
concept
in
decorative
arts
and
manufacturing.