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Avoid delays: here's how to deliver print-ready files for textile printing. Vector vs PNG, resolution, transparency, color and white carpet pad explained.
In textile printing, technology is rarely the real problem. The biggest delays usually occur before one is pressed: files that are not printable, logos as screenshots, wrong backgrounds, unclear colors and designs that look okay on screen but suddenly become ragged on fabric.
This guide is made for creative agencies, graphic designers, small print companies and (micro) apparel brands that want to move quickly. You'll learn:
The goal: fewer emails back-and-forth, less "re-work," and a first proof that's right the first time.
File requirements vary by technique: flex likes pure vector shapes, DTF can handle full color, sublimation has limitations on fabric color. The selection guide shows you which technique suits your project, so you can immediately submit the right type of file.
Vector is best for logos, text and tight shapes.
PNG is often the standard for full color artwork with transparent background.
JPG can be fine for photos, but less so for logos.
DPI in itself is not magic; the real question is: how many pixels do you have at the desired size?
Practical rule: if you look at the design at 100% and it's already soft or pixelated, it won't get better on fabric.
If you cut flex film and you get fraying, loose corners or impossibly small details, it's often because of the vector structure. The flex step-by-step guide shows you how file choices carry over into cutting, weeding and pressing.
Textiles are not paper. The fabric color affects the result.
Think of the white undercoat as a primer layer that "lights up" color on dark or colored fabrics.
For DTF, this concept is often baked into the print construction. For other techniques, it is sometimes not available or requires a different approach.
Use this as a default in your email or order form:
Standardizing this will save the most time in your whole production process.
Rather not. Screenshots are often too small and contain compression artifacts. For logos, vector (AI/PDF) is best; for full color artwork, provide a PNG at an adequate size.
Ask your supplier or designer to vectorize the logo, or at least provide a high-resolution version. Allow for extra time/cost for conversion, and limitations on cutting (flex) or sharpness at small size.
A good delivery is only really 'good' if it matches the technique you choose (flex/DTF/sublimation) as well as your fabric color. In the main guide you can quickly make that choice and avoid making the right files for the wrong technique.