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All about sublimation on polyester: temperature/time, avoiding ghosting, color expectations and when it's better to choose DTF or flex.
Sublimation is often the "premium" choice for sportswear and polyester applications: the print feels almost non-existent, remains colorfast for a long time when used correctly, and doesn't crack like some films can. Still, sublimation in production can be quite frustrating. You press one sample perfectly, and on the next you have ghosting, dull colors or unexpected hues.
This guide focuses on what really matters for consistent sublimation: material rules (polyester percentage, fabric color), setting ranges (temperature/time/print), a checklist to avoid ghosting, and how to manage color expectations so customers (or your team) don't experience "black = gray" or "red = fuchsia."
We keep it practical and brand-independent: you'll learn a testing method that works whether you're in a sports club, print studio or small merch setup.
Sublimation is great on the right material, but not universal. In the DTF vs flex vs sublimation decision aid, you can see in one decision tree when polyester sublimation wins, and when you're better off reaching for DTF or flex.
The higher the polyester content, the better the color usually "picks up. At low percentages, you often get a vintage/washed effect. This may be desirable, but talk it down.
Sublimation does not add white ink. Anything that has to be "white" in your design is in fact the color of the fabric. So on dark textiles, you will never get true coverage.
For mugs, plates or other hardgoods, a polymer coating is required. Without a coating, the color will not fade or adhere correctly.
If any of those three are questionable, schedule a test press and explicitly state the expectation of color and coverage.
Are you working with dark cotton or want full color on a non-sublimation-friendly fabric? Then DTF is often the logical route. The DTF press guide tells you how to press transfers correctly and which peel/second press choices help with sustainability.
As with DTF, we work with ranges.
Why ranges. Because paper, ink and fabric coating affect the process.
Ghosting is almost always movement: paper shifting when closing or opening.
Practical measures:
What you see on a backlit screen is not what you get on fabric. Fabric reflects differently and has texture.
Sublimation has no white undercoat and works on light polyester. 'Deep black' can look dark gray depending on ink set, profile and material. Communicate that up front.
The gain is in process discipline: positioning, fixing, controlled opening, and color expectation framing in advance.
Even with sublimation, maintenance determines how much longer colors stay "new. In the washing guide you will find universal rules as well as technique-specific nuances, handy to pass along to teams or clients.
It can, but the result is often less saturated and can take on a "vintage" look. The lower the polyester percentage, the less dye can soak into the fibers. Test and tune expectations.
Often due to material (polyester quality/coating), too low transfer energy (temperature/time/printing), or color management (profiles). Also, check that your design is not too subtle for the fabric color.
You now know how to make sublimation more stable (material rules, ghosting checklist and color expectation). The next step is to determine if sublimation is really the best choice for your project compared to DTF or flex. The main guide will help you make that consideration quickly and avoid misapplications.