How it works
UV Printing Technology
A plain-language breakdown of how UV direct-to-object printing works, what the ink system does, and when this process is the right choice for your project.
The basics
What is UV printing?
UV printing uses ink that cures instantly when exposed to ultraviolet light. A print head deposits ink directly onto the surface of an object, and UV lamps mounted on the print head cure each droplet the moment it lands. The result is a dry, hard, bonded print right off the bed. No heat press. No transfer film. No vinyl overlay.
Because the ink cures rather than dries, it bonds tightly to a wide range of non-porous and semi-porous surfaces. Wood, acrylic, glass, metal, ceramic, leather, slate, stone, and tile all take UV ink well. The cured ink is scratch-resistant and holds its color without laminate or protective coating on most surfaces. What you see coming off the bed is the finished print.
The ink stack
The print system
Our printer runs three types of ink, all deposited in the same pass:
CMYK
Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Key (black) combine to reproduce any color in your design. The same four-color model used in commercial offset printing. Full photographic range, sharp lines, precise gradients.
White
White ink lays down before the CMYK layer on dark or transparent substrates. Without it, colors on black glass or dark wood look washed out. White underbase makes color pop on any surface, regardless of its original color.
Gloss Varnish
Spot varnish is applied selectively to specific areas of the design. It adds a gloss finish layer over chosen elements, creating a tactile contrast between matte and shiny areas within the same print.
Our signature capability
Real Raised 3D Texture
Standard UV printing is a flat process. Our raised UV process is a layered white ink technique that builds real three-dimensional relief on the printed surface. The print head deposits white ink in multiple controlled passes before the CMYK color layer. Each pass adds height. The final result is raised texture up to 5mm that you can feel with your finger.
This is not a visual trick or a texture pattern printed flat. The surface of the object is physically higher where the white layers built up. When the color prints on top, it follows the relief, so the final piece catches light and shadow the way a sculpted surface would.
Use cases
Oil painting reproductions
Brushstroke texture built into the surface. The painting looks and feels like it was made with a brush.
Braille signage
ADA-compliant raised dots for room identification and wayfinding. Accurate dot height for tactile readability.
Tactile branding
Logos and wordmarks with raised relief on plaques, awards, and corporate gifts.
Faux brushstrokes and texture art
Abstract and illustrative prints where the texture itself is part of the design concept.
Side by side
Direct-to-object vs other methods
Each method has its place. This is an honest look at where UV direct-to-object wins, where it does not, and which method to choose for your project.
| Method | Best for | Not ideal for | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
UV Direct-to-Object (this site) | Hard surfaces, rigid objects, full-color on wood/metal/acrylic/glass/ceramic, 3D texture, small runs, one-off custom pieces | Stretchy fabric, very large flat surfaces, objects with tight internal curves the print head cannot reach | No transfer step. Ink bonds directly. Result is scratch-resistant and permanent. |
DTF (Direct-to-Film) | T-shirts, hoodies, hats, fabric items, gang sheets for decorators | Hard objects, rigid surfaces, anything that cannot go through a heat press | Transfer film goes on fabric via heat press. See our sister site longislanddtfprinting.com. |
Sublimation | Polyester fabric, polymer-coated mugs and drinkware, light-colored substrates | Dark substrates, natural materials (wood, leather, ceramic without coating), items that cannot handle heat | Color dye converts to gas and bonds into polymer coating. No texture possible. Colors fade on dark backgrounds. |
Vinyl / Cut Graphics | Vehicle graphics, window decals, simple signage, solid-color shapes and text | Photographic detail, complex gradients, anything requiring many colors without a high per-piece cost | Cut material adhered to a surface. Edges can lift over time. Full-color printing requires printed vinyl rolls plus laminate. |
What we print on
Substrate range
We can print on 300+ materials. Here is a breakdown by family. For a full material reference, see the substrate guide.
Wood
Panels, coasters, boards, plaques, boxes
Acrylic
Sheets, blocks, keychains, signage blanks
Glass
Tumblers, ornaments, tiles, bottles
Metal
Aluminum, stainless, brass, anodized
Ceramic
Tiles, mugs, plates, ornaments
Leather
Patches, wallets, keychains, hats
Slate
Coasters, plaques, wall art
Stone
Tiles, river rock, decorative pieces
Tile
Ceramic, porcelain, stone tile
Plastic
Phone cases, ABS panels, gift items
Paper & Card
Thick stock, packaging, book covers
And more
Cork, bamboo, MDF, EVA foam, and beyond
Cylindrical objects
Rotary printing
Most UV printers only handle flat objects. Our printer includes a rotary attachment that holds cylindrical items at a fixed axis and rotates them under the print head as it passes. This lets us print a continuous wrap around the circumference of the object without seams or distortion.
We use the rotary attachment for tumblers, mugs, water bottles, flasks, golf balls, pens, and similar round objects. The diameter range covers most common drinkware sizes. If you have an unusual shape or size, ask us before ordering and we can confirm whether it fits.
Browse drinkware optionsReady to print?
Browse the catalog to see products and pricing. Have a custom project or a material you do not see listed? Contact us directly.