I have used InkAID on quilting cotton for a pillow with fabulous results, getting a print that looked absolutely as good as if it had been printed on a high-end heavy-weight (say 300 gsm) lustre or semi-gloss photo paper -- good depth of color, accurate color, crisp, clear, extraordinary level of detail. I used an ordinary quilting cotton which had a slight white/off-white stripe to it. I painted on two thin coats of InkAID Translucent Gloss Precoat, waiting for the first to dry before applying the second. I then ironed it to a piece of freezer paper to stabilize it in the printer, and with a sewing machine zig-zagged the edges so they wouldn't loosen and catch the printhead (believe me, this is a necessary extra step, at least for the Epson 4900 which I used). My fabric was cut 17 inches wide by something somewhat longer than that. I was printing a navigational map with teeny-tiny water depth markings which came out crisp and clear on the fabric. The only downside is worrying about whether the fabric will catch your printhead and kill your printer, and the slightly stiff resulting fabric. This stiffness has softened somewhat with use. Also, I don't know whether it would withstand washing; but I've used pillows for many years without their needing washing, so I haven't worried about that. Will test it at some point. InkAID is located in upstate New York, and I have heard that they don't ship in the middle of the winter to make sure their products don't freeze during shipment. Don't know if that is actually true or not. They can be reached at
www.inkAID1.com. Another bottle I have indicates
www.inkAID.com. Also, telephone numbers on the bottles are 888-424-8167 and 315-786-6709. I used Translucent Gloss Precoat in the 1 pint size for 2 coats on two pieces about 17 x 25, and used most of the bottle. I also ordered White Matte Precoat, but haven't tried it yet. This stuff was great for my intended use. Indeed, it far surpassed by hopes for the result. InkAID is promoted for everything you can put a coat on and run through a printer, not just fabric. Please let us know what you end up doing/using. --Barbara