Screen Print Transfers Vs. DTF Transfers: A Straight Comparison

From Tyrrapedia

Placing an Order The process is online and doesn't require a sales call. Upload your artwork, specify your dimensions, choose your quantity, and use the gang sheet builder if you're combining multiple designs. Pricing updates as you build the order, so you know what you're paying before you check out.

What EazyDTF Offers EazyDTF is a DTF transfer service operating out of Tampa, which matters if you've searched "DTF transfers near me" specifically because you've been burned by a vendor in another state taking two weeks to ship. Being local means faster physical turnaround and, when things need to be right, an actual conversation rather than a support ticket queue.

Let's be direct about something: cheap and low quality are not the same thing. In the custom apparel business, people conflate the two constantly, and it costs decorators money — either they overpay out of fear, or they go bargain hunting and end up with transfers that crack after two washes and blow a client relationship they spent months building. Neither outcome is acceptable when you're running a real operation, even a small one.

Wholesale DTF transfers ordered on gang sheets make the most sense when you have multiple small jobs going out around the same time, or when you're stocking common designs (logos, event graphics) that you'll press on demand over the next few weeks. A 22x60 inch sheet packed with your regular customers' logos can cover a lot of ground for one flat price.

This is where a lot of decorators make mistakes. They find a supplier, place a few test orders, and start building their pricing around what they're paying — without fully understanding the pricing structure they're working with. Then a wholesale account opens up, or gang sheets become available, and suddenly the math looks completely different. Let's work through what matters.

For a screen printing shop in Tampa that doesn't want to run a six-piece order through their press setup, DTF transfer printing makes the short runs viable. For a church group coordinator ordering 25 shirts for a retreat, it means not hitting a 48-piece minimum. For an event organizer who needs something ready by Thursday, it means placing an order online without scheduling a production meeting.

Gang Sheets: How to Use Them Correctly A gang sheet is simply a single print run with multiple designs or sizes arranged together on one film. Instead of paying per design at a flat rate, you pay for the total print area. If you have several small logos that need to go on different items, arranging them tightly on a gang sheet is the most cost-efficient way to order.

If you're already running a screen print shop and want to stop turning away small orders, DTF transfer printing through a service like EazyDTF is a direct answer — you get the finished transfers, press them yourself, and keep the customer relationship without touching a screen or a squeegee.

EazyDTF's gang sheet builder lets you arrange your artwork yourself, which gives you control over how the space is used. For small shops running several jobs simultaneously, this is where the cost structure really starts to work in your favor. Bulk DTF transfers ordered as gang sheets can bring your per-piece cost down significantly compared to individual prints.

For most Tampa-area decorators, the realistic math looks like this: submit a clean file today, production runs tonight or tomorrow, and shipping gets it to your door within a day or two given the Florida proximity. That's workable for most deadlines if you're not placing the order 18 hours before the event.

Back prints: 12–13 inches wide works for most adult backs. If you're adding a name and number below a back design, account for the total vertical space — neck-to-waist is roughly 18–20 inches on an adult large.

Application Settings For https://roleropedia.com/index.php?title=Usuario:RickieSilas reference, standard press settings for ready-to-press DTF transfers on a cotton or cotton-blend t-shirt are 325°F (163°C), firm pressure, for 15 seconds. Peel hot. Do a cold peel if the transfer specifies it, but most standard DTF transfers are hot-peel. Let the transfer cool for 30–60 seconds after peeling, then optionally repress with a cover sheet for 5 seconds to lock down any edges.

Sizing Guidelines for T-Shirt Transfers Getting the size right before you order saves you from pressing transfers that look off-center or swallowed up on the shirt. Here's how most decorators approach it:

How DTF Transfers Actually Work Direct to film transfers are printed onto a special film using water-based inks, then coated with a hot-melt adhesive powder that gets cured in an oven. What you receive is a ready-to-press transfer — you apply it to your garment with a heat press, peel, and you're done. No screens, no weeding, no minimum color counts. That's the practical appeal for small shops and decorators who don't want to own and maintain a DTF printer themselves.

On wash durability: ready to press transfers from EazyDTF use a hot-melt adhesive that bonds properly when pressed at the right temperature and time. The instructions aren't suggestions — pressing too cold or too short will give you a transfer that looks fine until the first wash. Follow the press parameters, and the result holds up through normal laundry cycles the way your customers expect.