Color blending in screen printing is one of the most visually striking techniques available — and one of the most technically demanding to execute consistently. A perfectly blended gradient across a chest print, a smooth split-fountain transition from gold to black on a sleeve, a multicolor wet blend across a wide athletic design — these effects command premium pricing and require genuine technical mastery to produce reliably.

This guide covers every method of color blending used in professional screen printing: split fountain (wet blend), wet-on-wet blending, discharge blending, and gradient reproduction through color separation. Each method has distinct requirements, distinct limitations, and distinct failure modes. Understanding all of them is what separates a printer who can blend occasionally from one who blends consistently.


What Is Color Blending in Screen Printing?

Color blending refers to any technique that produces a gradual transition between two or more ink colors within a single printed area. Unlike a sharp color break (where one solid color ends and another begins at a hard edge), a blend creates a zone of gradual transition — an area where colors mix or visually merge.

There are four fundamentally different approaches to achieving this:

  1. Split fountain (wet blend): Multiple inks loaded into one screen, blended at their meeting point
  2. Wet-on-wet blending: Transparent or semi-transparent inks overlaid while still wet
  3. Discharge blending: Dye-removal inks creating gradient effects on reactive-dyed garments
  4. Separation-based blending: Gradients reproduced through halftone or index color separations

Each method produces a different visual result and is suited to different design types and press setups.


Method 1: Split Fountain (Wet Blend)

The split fountain is the classic screen printing blend technique. Multiple ink colors are loaded into different zones of a single screen, separated by physical dividers (or simply placed adjacent to each other). As the squeegee passes across the screen, it mixes the colors at their meeting points, creating a blend zone.

How Split Fountain Works

Ink is loaded into the screen in stripes — for example, red on the left half and yellow on the right half. The squeegee passes across both colors simultaneously. At the center where they meet, the squeegee physically mixes them, creating orange in the transition zone. After several passes, the blend zone widens and softens as the inks continue to intermix.

The critical variable in split fountain blending is how much the inks mix at the boundary — and this is controlled primarily by squeegee pressure, flood stroke pressure, and the number of print cycles.

Split Fountain Setup: Step by Step

1. Choose compatible inks. Not all inks blend cleanly with each other. Inks from the same manufacturer and the same product line are most reliable. Test first — some color combinations produce muddy, undesirable mid-tones.

2. Select the correct mesh. Split fountain blending is typically done through a 110–160 TPI screen for solid areas. Finer mesh limits ink volume and reduces blend width; coarser mesh produces heavier deposits but may compromise edge detail on the design.

3. Load the inks with spacers or freehand. Place each ink color in its designated zone. Some printers use thin cardboard dividers to create clean initial color zones; others simply load freehand. The divider is removed before printing begins.

4. Start printing. The first few prints will have a relatively sharp color boundary. As printing continues, the boundary zone gradually widens into a softer blend. This means the first 5–10 prints in a run may look different from the production prints — discard or set aside the initial startup prints.

5. Monitor and maintain the blend. As ink is consumed from each zone, replenish each color independently to prevent color drift. Never add one color’s ink to the other’s zone.

Split Fountain Variations

Two-color blend: The simplest version — two colors blend at a single meeting point. Produces a three-tone result (color A, blend zone, color B).

Three-color blend: Three ink zones across the screen. Two meeting points produce two blend zones. Requires careful balance of ink volumes and squeegee pressure.

Radial blend: Inks arranged in a wedge or radial pattern for circular or directional blend effects. Requires precise squeegee angle control.

Vertical vs. horizontal blend direction: Blend direction is perpendicular to the squeegee stroke direction. For a left-to-right blend, load inks in left and right zones; for a top-to-bottom blend, load inks in top and bottom zones and rotate the screen 90°.

Split Fountain Limitations


Method 2: Wet-on-Wet Blending

Wet-on-wet blending uses the interaction between two or more inks printed in sequence while the first ink is still wet. Unlike split fountain (which blends on the screen), wet-on-wet blending occurs on the substrate — the second ink partially penetrates or sits on top of the wet first ink.

How Wet-on-Wet Works

In a multi-head automatic press, multiple screens print in rapid succession with no curing between colors. The second color — typically a transparent or semi-transparent ink — prints on top of the still-wet first color. In the overlap zone, the inks mix on the substrate, producing a blended area.

The degree of mixing depends on:

Wet-on-Wet Blend Design Principles

For intentional blending effects, the separation must be designed to create overlap zones:

This is effectively a two-color halftone blend — similar in concept to how CMYK transparent process printing works, but with only two colors instead of four.

Controlling Wet-on-Wet Blend Quality

Ink selection is critical. Standard opaque plastisols produce poor wet-on-wet blends because the second color sits on top of the first rather than mixing. For intentional blending use:

Flash curing disrupts wet blending. If the first color is flash-cured before the second prints on top, wet-on-wet blending cannot occur — the inks will not interact. For wet blend work, no flash cure between the blend colors.


Method 3: Discharge Blending

Discharge inks work by chemically removing the dye from reactive-dyed (typically ring-spun cotton) garments and replacing it with a pigment. Because the discharge reaction is controlled by ink thickness and the concentration of the discharge activator, it is possible to create gradient effects by varying ink deposit — areas with more discharge ink lose more dye; areas with less discharge ink retain more of the original garment color.

How Discharge Gradients Work

A halftone or index color separation is used to create a gradient of discharge ink coverage. In the highlight areas of the gradient, small dots of discharge ink partially remove the garment dye, creating a lighter tone. In the shadow areas, heavier discharge ink coverage removes more dye, creating a color closer to the pigment color.

The result is a gradient that appears to blend between the original garment color and the discharge pigment color — a visual effect that cannot be reproduced with standard plastisol because plastisol sits on top of the fabric while discharge dye-removal reveals the natural fiber beneath.

Discharge Blending Requirements

Discharge Gradient Design

Design the separation as you would any halftone gradient, with these adjustments:


Method 4: Separation-Based Blending (Halftone and Index Color Gradients)

The most controlled and reproducible method of achieving smooth color blends in screen printing is through color separation — creating gradient transitions using halftone dots or index color diffusion dither. This method does not require wet blending on press; the gradient is built into the separation and reproduces consistently from print to print.

Halftone-Based Gradients

A halftone gradient uses varying dot sizes to simulate tonal transitions between colors. In a two-color gradient (e.g., red to black), the red separation has dots that decrease from 100% to 0% across the gradient, while the black separation increases from 0% to 100%. In the mid-zone, both colors have dots at intermediate sizes (e.g., 50% red + 50% black), and the eye mixes them visually into a dark red-brown transition.

This approach works best with:

Important: Halftone gradients between opaque inks do not blend visually — they produce a two-color dot pattern rather than a smooth gradient. For opaque ink blending, index color diffusion dither is a better choice.

Index Color Gradients

Index color separation uses diffusion dither — random pixel placement — to simulate gradients between a limited set of opaque colors. Because the pixels are randomly distributed, the eye blends them at normal viewing distance even though the inks themselves do not physically mix.

Index color is superior to halftone for:

The number of colors in the index directly controls gradient smoothness. For smooth gradient reproduction, plan for at least 8 colors; for photo-quality gradients with skin tones and complex transitions, 10–12 colors is recommended.


Troubleshooting: Color Blending Problems

Problem 1: Blend Zone Too Narrow / Sharp Color Break

Symptoms: Colors meet with a visible hard edge rather than a smooth transition (split fountain).

Causes and fixes:

Problem 2: Blend Zone Too Wide / Colors Muddying

Symptoms: Blend spreads across too much of the design; original colors are being contaminated.

Causes and fixes:

Problem 3: Muddy, Unattractive Mid-Tones in Blend Zone

Symptoms: The blend transition produces a gray, brown, or visually unpleasant intermediate color.

Causes and fixes:

Problem 4: Inconsistent Blend from Print to Print

Symptoms: Each print looks different; blend zone shifts position and width inconsistently.

Causes and fixes:

Problem 5: Halftone Gradient Appears Posterized / Banded

Symptoms: Gradient that should be smooth shows distinct visible steps between tones.

Causes and fixes:


Common Mistakes in Color Blending

1. Attempting split fountain on a manual press without practice. Split fountain on a manual press requires consistent squeegee technique across every print. Inconsistent pressure, speed, or angle produces inconsistent blends. Practice on waste shirts before a production run.

2. Using complementary color combinations without a transition color. Complementary colors mix to gray. Either avoid these combinations or plan a white or neutral transition zone between them.

3. Not testing the ink combination before committing to a run. Every color pair mixes differently. A 10-minute color test saves a wasted production run.

4. Applying flash cure between blend colors in wet-on-wet work. Flash curing the first color before the second prints on top prevents wet interaction — destroying the blend effect. Only flash between non-blend color groups.

5. Expecting discharge blending on polyester garments. Discharge chemistry does not work on polyester or synthetic blends. Always verify garment fiber content and dye type before planning a discharge blend design.

6. Designing halftone gradients without dot gain compensation. Gradients will always print darker than intended without compensation. The shadow end of every gradient fills in; the highlight end loses dots. Apply compensation at the separation stage.

7. Not accounting for blend shift over a long run. Split fountain blends change character over a print run as inks migrate and mix. The 500th print in a run looks different from the 50th. For designs where consistency matters, use separation-based gradients instead.


Summary: Choosing the Right Blending Method

Design Goal Best Method
Simple two-color gradient, bold graphic Split fountain
Multi-color gradient, artistic effect Split fountain (3+ colors) or index color separation
Photographic color blend, light garment CMYK halftone separation
Photographic color blend, dark garment Index color separation (8–12 colors)
Soft vintage gradient effect on cotton Discharge halftone
Consistent, run-to-run reproducible blend Separation-based (halftone or index)
Maximum creative flexibility on press Wet-on-wet with transparent inks

Color blending in screen printing is as much art as technique. The physical methods — split fountain, wet-on-wet — require skilled hands and careful monitoring. The separation-based methods — halftone and index color — require skilled prepress and correct technical specifications. Mastering both gives a screen printer a full toolkit for any gradient challenge a client can present.


Dragonfly Colors specializes in color separations that reproduce smooth, accurate gradients on press. Contact us for professional separation services.