I don't know if this trick will work with the soluble paper or not, but it works for when you want to print on fabric: Cut a sheet of freezer paper (it's paper on one side and wax on the other side and can be found in the grocery aisle with the cling wrap, foil, etc.) to fit your printer (usually 8.5"x11"). Cut your fabric or, in this case, soluble paper a little smaller than the freezer paper. Turn your iron onto a medium setting and on your ironing board place your soluble paper face down and the freezer paper wax-side down on top of the soluble paper. Lightly press the iron onto the paper for a couple of seconds making sure not to wiggle it. Lift the iron straight up and place on another section for a couple of seconds. The freezer paper should now stick to the soluble paper which will lend it strength and support when going through the printer and may help with keeping the fibers getting jammed in the printer itself.
NOTE: I have never used soluble paper and would try this out myself if I had any on hand so I don't know what the results would be. This is strictly going off of my experience in printing on fabric through my printer. I would definitely do a trial run first, by cutting just a little bit of the soluble paper of the main sheet, ironing the little piece to the freezer paper and checking to see if the heat of the iron burns the soluble paper (turns it brown or off-white in any way), and seeing how easily it releases from the freezer paper. If the soluble paper is tissue thin, it has the possibility of ripping when the freezer paper is peeled away. The nice thing about the freezer paper, though, is that it does not leave a waxy residue on the objects it's ironed to, which is why so many people (including myself) adore it for stenciling! ^_^
As for which printer to buy, it all depends on what you mainly want to get printed (text or photos), how much you're willing to spend on ink (people don't often think about how much ink costs when getting a printer- you have to go by the cost of the cartridges AND by how often you'll have to replace them), if the company offers specialty inks (like the pigment inks that were mentioned on SoapQueen) for that particular model, and if there are any extras you want on it. I love my Epson Stylus NX400. It's a copy/scanner, too, and has slots for my SD/XD cards so I don't have to worry about losing camera cables to get my pictures of my camera. I do have slight feeding problems with it though as the mechanism is a bit finicky and will put paper in crooked, grr... but the cost of the cartridges isn't too bad and they last through a decent amount of paper. If you're going to invest that much money into a printer. Do as much research as you can! This is definitely not something to impulse buy or choose to get because of one review. And good luck!
_________________ Tamra New to soaping, long time crafter and artisan, avid learner of new things!
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