Heat transfer vinyl (HTV) is a polyurethane or PVC film with a heat-activated adhesive backing that bonds to fabric under pressure at 280–320°F. You cut the design with a vinyl cutter, weed away the excess, and press it onto a shirt with a heat press. It’s the fastest way to decorate one shirt or 100 shirts when screen printing doesn’t make sense — names, numbers, single-color logos, short runs, and personalization work that comes in late on a Friday.
This guide covers the working details: how HTV bonds, which type to use on which fabric, application settings that actually work on a production floor, and where each material in our Quickweed line fits. If you’ve been doing this for years, skip to the comparison tables and troubleshooting. If you’re newer to HTV but already running a press, start at the top.
What is heat transfer vinyl?
Heat transfer vinyl is a thin, flexible film — usually polyurethane (PU) or PVC — laminated to a clear carrier sheet with a pressure-sensitive backing. The film itself carries the color and finish. The carrier holds the design in place after weeding and peels away after pressing.
Three layers make up a sheet of HTV:
- Carrier sheet — the clear plastic on top. It’s sticky enough to hold cut pieces in alignment but releases cleanly under heat.
- Color film — the PU or PVC layer that ends up on the shirt. This is what you see, touch, and wash.
- Heat-activated adhesive — the bottom layer, dormant at room temperature, that liquefies under heat and pressure and bonds into the fabric fibers.
When you press HTV at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with firm pressure, the adhesive flows into the weave and cures as it cools. Done right, a quality HTV print survives 50+ industrial washes without cracking or peeling.
How heat transfer vinyl works on shirts
The process has five steps. Each one has a failure mode.
1. Design and mirror. Build your artwork in your cutter software. Mirror the design horizontally before cutting — you’re cutting through the back of the film, so the finished print needs to read backwards on the carrier. This is the single most common mistake in HTV: forgetting to mirror.
2. Cut. Load the vinyl into your cutter with the carrier side down (shiny side down on most rolls). Cutter blade depth and force depend on the material — a 45° blade at moderate force handles standard EasyWeed-style PU; thicker materials like flock or puff need a 60° blade and higher force.
3. Weed. Pull away the excess vinyl around your design with a weeding hook, leaving only the parts you want on the shirt stuck to the carrier. Cut intricate designs with a weed border for sanity.
4. Press. Position on the shirt. Press at the correct temperature and time for your material. Firm, even pressure — a heat press dialed to 6–8 PSI on most domestic models.
5. Peel. Some HTV peels hot (immediately), some peels warm (after 5–10 seconds), some peels cold (fully cooled). The carrier tells you, and the product spec sheet tells you. Peeling hot when the material wants cold pulls the design up.
Which side goes down on the cutter?
The shiny carrier side faces down on the cutting mat, with the matte adhesive side facing up toward the blade. You’re cutting through the matte film, not through the clear carrier. If you cut shiny-side-up, you’ll slice the carrier and ruin the sheet.
The exception is some printable HTVs, where the printable surface goes up. Always check the spec sheet for the specific product — but for 95% of standard cut HTV, matte side up, shiny side down.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl?
Yes, always mirror cut HTV before sending it to the cutter. The blade cuts through the back of the film, so the design ends up reversed on the carrier and reads correctly once flipped onto the shirt. The only HTV you don’t mirror is printable HTV that you print on with an inkjet or laser printer — that prints face-up and applies face-up, so no mirror.
HTV vs other shirt decoration methods
HTV competes with screen printing, DTF, and sublimation. Each has a sweet spot.
| Method | Best for | Min order | Cost per shirt (1-color) | Hand feel | Durability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HTV (cut vinyl) | 1–50 shirts, names/numbers, single colors | 1 | $2–$6 | Slight raised feel | 50+ washes |
| Screen printing | 50+ shirts, multi-color, bulk runs | 12–24 practical | $0.40–$2 at volume | Soft (waterbase) to medium (plastisol) | 80+ washes |
| DTF transfers | 1–500 shirts, full-color, complex art | 1 | $1.50–$4 | Medium, slight plastic | 40–60 washes |
| Sublimation | Polyester only, all-over prints, full color | 1 | $1–$3 | None (dyed into fabric) | Fabric life |
HTV wins when the order is small, the design is simple, or you need names and numbers on jerseys the same day. Screen printing wins on volume. DTF wins on full-color art at low quantity. Sublimation wins on polyester when you want zero hand feel.
Heat transfer vinyl on cotton, polyester, and blends
Most standard PU HTV bonds to 100% cotton, 100% polyester, and cotton/poly blends. The settings change by fabric:
- 100% cotton — 305°F, 10–15 seconds, firm pressure. Peel per product spec.
- 50/50 cotton/poly — 305°F, 10–12 seconds, firm pressure.
- 100% polyester — drop temp to 280°F to avoid scorching. Press 10–12 seconds. Use a low-temp HTV when possible.
- Performance/athletic poly — use a low-temp or specialty HTV designed for sublimated bases to prevent dye migration.
- Nylon — use a nylon-rated HTV; standard adhesive doesn’t bite the slick surface.
Polyester is where most shops get burned. Press a standard HTV too hot on dyed polyester, and the dye migrates up through the vinyl in 24 hours — your white logo turns pink. The fix is a low-temp HTV (press at 270–280°F) or a blocking layer. Test wash and 24-hour rest any new poly job before shipping.
Types of heat transfer vinyl
HTV isn’t one material. The Quickweed line and our Siser EasyWeed stock cover every category a working shop runs into.
Standard PU (the workhorse)
Single-layer polyurethane, matte or semi-gloss finish, presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds. This is what you use for 80% of jobs — single-color logos, names, numbers, sleeve prints.
- Quickweed Matte Heat Transfer Vinyl 15” x 1 yd — our house Ameriflex line, $8.49–$9.49, weeds clean and presses fast.
- Siser EasyWeed Heat Transfer Vinyl 12” x 1 yd — $9.99, the industry reference for PU HTV. Hot peel, soft hand.
Fluorescent and neon
For high-visibility safety wear, sports jerseys, and anything that needs to pop. Same press settings as standard PU.
- Quickweed Neon High Gloss Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” x 1 yd — $11.49.
- Siser EasyWeed Fluorescent Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” x 1 yd — $14.99.
Metallic and gold
A thin metallic finish — not foil, more durable. Hand-washes well, holds color through 40+ wash cycles.
- Quickweed Metallic High Gloss Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” — $11.49 per yard, gold, silver, copper, and more.
Holographic and rainbow reflective
Diffraction-pattern finishes that shift color with light angle. Loud, cheerleader-uniform loud.
- Quickweed Rainbow Retro Reflective Heat Transfer Vinyl — $8.99–$21.99, holographic shift plus retroreflective core for night visibility.
Reflective (safety)
Glass-bead or microprismatic film that returns headlight light to the source. Required spec for high-vis runner gear, safety uniforms, and some construction PPE.
- Quickweed Rainbow Retro Reflective Heat Transfer Vinyl — doubles as both holographic and safety-reflective.
Carbon fiber
Embossed 3D carbon-fiber texture. Used a lot on automotive-themed shirts, racing apparel, and crossfit gear.
Brick / 3D puff
Thicker textured HTV that sits 1–2mm proud of the fabric for a raised dimensional look. Different from puff additive — this is a film that’s already raised.
- Quickweed Brick Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” x 1 yd — $18.49–$139.99 depending on quantity.
Stretch (athletic and performance)
For spandex, lycra, performance poly, and anything that gives more than 30%. Standard PU cracks on heavy stretch — super-stretch HTV moves with the fabric.
Varnish / high-gloss
Wet-look glossy finish for fashion apparel and screen-print-replacement work where you want sheen.
- Quickweed Varnish Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” x 1 yd — $12.99.
- Quickweed High Gloss Revolution Heat Transfer Vinyl 20” x 1 yd — $11.49.
Printable HTV (inkjet and eco-solvent)
White PU film with a printable top coat. Print full-color artwork with an inkjet or eco-solvent printer, contour-cut, weed, and press. The gap-filler for sub-50-shirt full-color runs where DTF isn’t set up.
- QuickPrint Semi-Gloss PU Printable Heat Transfer Vinyl — $40.74–$504, scales from a single sheet to a full roll.
Best heat transfer vinyl: what we actually run
We sell what we’d put on our own press. If you asked us what to stock for a working shop, here’s the short list.
For 80% of orders — standard PU. Quickweed Matte or Siser EasyWeed. Both press in under 15 seconds at 305°F, both weed clean, both hit 50+ washes. Quickweed runs cheaper per yard; EasyWeed is the industry reference if a customer specs it by name.
For polyester jerseys with numbers. Quickweed Super Stretch for the stretch margin, or low-temp EasyWeed Sub Block for dye-blocking on sublimated bases.
For team names and high-vis. Quickweed Neon High Gloss or Siser EasyWeed Fluorescent. Both load and cut clean at standard 45° blade settings.
For fashion and retail. Quickweed Varnish or High Gloss Revolution. The wet-look gloss reads as premium next to standard matte PU.
For full-color short runs without a DTF setup. QuickPrint Semi-Gloss PU Printable. Print, contour-cut on a cutter with optical registration, weed, press at 305°F.
For specialty effects. Carbon Fiber, Brick, and Rainbow Retro Reflective cover the upcharge requests that come in by email — the jobs where the customer wants something different and is willing to pay for it.
How to apply heat transfer vinyl: step by step
Standard PU on a cotton tee, start to finish.
- Pre-press the shirt for 5 seconds at 305°F to evaporate moisture and flatten the surface. Skipping this step is why HTV peels at the corners six washes in.
- Position the design. For a left chest, measure 4” down from the collar and 3” from the centerline. For a full front, 3” down from the collar and centered.
- Lay the HTV carrier-side up (clear side up, design reading correctly through the carrier).
- Press at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with firm pressure (6–8 PSI). Don’t open the press during the cycle.
- Peel. Hot peel for EasyWeed and most Quickweed PU — peel the carrier in one smooth motion immediately after opening. Cold peel materials need to cool to room temp first.
- Re-press for 5 seconds with a Teflon sheet or parchment paper over the design to lock the bond and smooth any carrier marks. This step adds 5+ years of wash life.
Total time per shirt once the design is cut and weeded: under 30 seconds.
How to cut heat transfer vinyl
Cutter settings vary by material and machine. Below are starting points for the three most common cutters running in print shops.
| Material | Blade | Force (Cricut) | Force (Silhouette) | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard PU (EasyWeed, Quickweed Matte) | 45° | Iron-On setting | Force 5, Thickness 8 | 8 |
| Glitter / textured | 60° | Glitter Iron-On | Force 8, Thickness 14 | 5 |
| Flock | 60° | Flock Iron-On | Force 10, Thickness 18 | 5 |
| Holographic / metallic | 45° | Holographic Iron-On | Force 6, Thickness 10 | 8 |
| Reflective | 60° | Custom — test cut | Force 10, Thickness 18 | 5 |
| Stretch | 45° | Iron-On + 1 | Force 6, Thickness 10 | 7 |
| Printable PU | 45° (contour cut) | Print Then Cut | Force 6, Thickness 10 | 5 |
Always run a test cut on a 1” square in the corner of the sheet before committing the full design. A clean test cut weeds the square with the carrier intact underneath. If the carrier tears, drop force. If the vinyl won’t lift cleanly, raise force.
Custom heat transfer vinyl: pricing short runs
For a one-color HTV shirt with a simple name-and-number, our shops typically charge:
- 1–10 shirts: $12–$18 per shirt
- 11–24 shirts: $9–$14 per shirt
- 25–49 shirts: $7–$11 per shirt
- 50+ shirts: consider screen printing instead — the per-shirt cost drops below $5
Material cost on a yard of standard PU at $8.49–$14.99 covers roughly 12–20 average-size designs depending on yield. Labor (cut, weed, press) is the bigger input — figure 90 seconds per shirt at scale.
Troubleshooting HTV problems
Edges lift after washing. Under-pressed. Bump time to 15 seconds, verify temp with a heat gun (press dials can be off by 20°F), and always do the 5-second re-press.
Vinyl peels off the carrier when you try to weed. Cut too deep — you sliced through the carrier. Drop blade force.
Vinyl won’t weed cleanly, tears or stretches. Cut too shallow. Raise blade force or drop speed.
Design comes off with the carrier when peeling. Wrong peel temp. If hot peel didn’t bond, the press wasn’t hot enough or wasn’t on long enough. Re-press 5 more seconds and try peeling cold.
Print scorches or yellows. Press temp too high for the fabric (especially poly). Drop to 280°F and increase time slightly to compensate.
Dye migration on poly (white turns pink). Standard HTV applied to dyed polyester. Switch to a low-temp dye-blocker HTV and press at 270°F.
Carrier leaves shiny marks on the shirt. Cover with parchment or a Teflon sheet on the second press to dull the surface.
Design cracks after a few washes. Wrong material for the fabric — standard PU on heavy stretch will crack. Switch to super-stretch HTV. Also check that the customer isn’t washing hot and tumble-drying high; HTV holds up best in cold wash, low tumble.
Heat transfer vinyl: frequently asked questions
What temperature do you press heat transfer vinyl at?
Standard PU HTV presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with firm pressure. Polyester drops to 280°F. Always check the spec sheet for the specific product — low-temp and stretch HTVs can run as low as 260°F, and some specialty films need 320°F.
How long does heat transfer vinyl last on a shirt?
Properly applied quality HTV lasts 50+ wash cycles on cotton without cracking, peeling, or fading. Wash cold, inside out, and tumble dry low to maximize life. Industrial laundry (hot water, high heat dry) cuts that to roughly 25–30 cycles.
Can you put heat transfer vinyl on polyester?
Yes, but drop the press temperature to 270–280°F to avoid scorching and dye migration. For sublimated or athletic poly, use a low-temp HTV with a dye-blocking layer. Always test wash a sample and let it sit 24 hours before running the full order — migration shows up after the press cools.
What’s the difference between iron-on vinyl and heat transfer vinyl?
They’re the same product. “Iron-on” is the consumer-Cricut name; “heat transfer vinyl” or HTV is the industry name. A home iron will work in a pinch but doesn’t apply consistent temp or pressure — a heat press at 305°F and 6–8 PSI is the production answer.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl?
Yes for cut HTV, no for printable HTV. Cut HTV is loaded matte-side up and cut through the back of the film, so the design needs to read backwards on the carrier. Printable HTV is printed and applied face-up, so no mirror.
Which side of HTV goes down?
The shiny clear carrier side goes down on the cutting mat. The matte color side faces up toward the blade. When pressing, the carrier (shiny) side faces up — toward the heat platen — and the adhesive side faces down on the shirt.
What’s the best heat transfer vinyl for shirts?
For most shop work, Siser EasyWeed and our Quickweed Matte PU cover 80% of jobs — both press at 305°F for 10–15 seconds, weed clean, and hit 50+ wash cycles. For specialty work (stretch, metallic, reflective, printable) match the material to the fabric and the design.
Can you layer heat transfer vinyl?
Yes. Press each layer for 3–5 seconds (a tack press), then do a full press on the final layer for 10–15 seconds. Don’t layer more than three colors — the stack gets stiff and lifts at the edges. Use a Teflon sheet between the press and the design to avoid scorching lower layers.
What kind of cutter do you need for heat transfer vinyl?
Any vinyl cutter with adjustable force and blade depth works — Cricut Maker, Silhouette Cameo, Roland GX, Graphtec CE7, USCutter. For volume production, look at a 24” Roland or Graphtec with optical registration if you’re cutting printable HTV. Hobby cutters max out around 12” width and 50 cuts per session.
How do you apply heat transfer vinyl without a heat press?
A household iron works for small designs — set to cotton (highest setting, no steam), apply firm pressure for 30–45 seconds with parchment paper between the iron and the carrier, working the design in sections. The bond won’t be as durable as a heat press application — expect 15–25 washes instead of 50+.
Can heat transfer vinyl go on hats?
Yes, but use a hat press or a heat press with a curved platen attachment. Standard flat presses can’t apply even pressure to the curve of a cap front. Press at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with firm pressure.
How much heat transfer vinyl do I need per shirt?
A standard left-chest logo uses about 4” x 4” of vinyl. A full-front design uses 12” x 12”. A 20” x 36” yard of Quickweed yields roughly 20 left-chest designs or 4–5 full-front designs, depending on layout efficiency. Nest your designs in the cutter software to maximize yield.
Order, questions, or unsure which HTV to spec
We stock the Quickweed line and Siser EasyWeed in every standard color and most specialty finishes. If you’ve got a fabric you’ve never pressed before — a weird poly blend, a heavy spandex, a coated nylon — call us before you order a yard. We’ll tell you what we’d run on it, and if we don’t make the right product for the job, we’ll point you to the one we sell that does.
Family-owned in New Jersey since the start. When you call, someone who actually knows HTV picks up the phone.