Load heat transfer vinyl shiny side down on your cutting mat, and press it shiny side up on the shirt. The shiny side is the clear plastic carrier sheet. That carrier protects the design through cutting and pressing, and it’s the side your heat press or iron touches. The dull, matte side is the adhesive that bonds to the fabric. Get this backwards and you’ll either cut through the carrier or melt vinyl directly onto your platen.
That’s the answer. The rest of this article covers why, when it gets confusing, and how to apply HTV correctly start to finish, including mirroring, temperatures, and the specialty vinyls (holographic, puff, reflective, printable) that change the rules slightly.
What is heat transfer vinyl?
Heat transfer vinyl (HTV) is a thin, heat-activated polyurethane or PVC film bonded to a clear polyester carrier sheet. You cut a design into the vinyl layer with a plotter or cutter, weed away the excess, then apply heat and pressure to transfer the design onto a garment. The carrier sheet stays on during pressing and peels off after.
HTV is the dominant decoration method for short-run shirts, numbers and names on jerseys, and any job where screen printing doesn’t make economic sense. Most modern HTV cures between 280°F and 320°F with 10–15 seconds of pressure.
Which side is shiny, and which side is up?
Every roll of HTV has two sides. They look and feel different once you know what to look for.
| Side | Look | Feel | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shiny side | Glossy, reflective, clear-ish | Smooth plastic | Polyester carrier sheet. Protects the design. |
| Dull (matte) side | Flat color, no shine | Slight tackiness or texture | Vinyl + heat-activated adhesive. Bonds to fabric. |
The rule for every standard cut HTV:
- On the cutting mat: shiny side down. The blade cuts through the colored vinyl from the back. The carrier stays intact.
- On the shirt: shiny side up. The matte adhesive faces the fabric. Your heat press touches the carrier.
If you put it shiny side up on the mat, your blade cuts through the carrier and ruins the sheet. If you put it shiny side down on the shirt, the vinyl melts to your platen and the design ends up on your press cover, not your customer’s shirt.
Why “shiny side down” is the only answer that works
The carrier sheet serves three jobs at once:
- Holds the design in registration while you weed away the excess vinyl.
- Protects the vinyl from direct contact with the heat platen during pressing.
- Transfers the design to the fabric in one piece, then peels off cleanly.
That only works if the carrier is on top during pressing. The adhesive is on the bottom, touching the shirt, because that’s the side that needs to melt and bond into the fibers.
There’s a small handful of HTV products where the visual logic gets confusing. Reflective vinyls look shiny on both sides. Holographic vinyls look shiny on the colored side. We’ll cover those edge cases below.
How to tell which side is which (when both sides look shiny)
Holographic, metallic foil, and reflective HTV can confuse the eye. Both sides reflect light. Use these three checks:
- Bend test. Bend a corner. The carrier sheet is stiffer and more plastic-feeling. The vinyl/adhesive side is softer and more flexible.
- Fingernail test. Scratch a corner lightly with your fingernail. The adhesive side will mark or feel slightly tacky. The carrier won’t.
- Edge test. Look at the edge of the sheet. You can usually see the carrier as a separate, clear layer sitting on top of the colored vinyl.
When in doubt, the carrier is always the layer the cutter blade should not penetrate. If you’re using a Cricut, Silhouette, or commercial plotter, the carrier goes face down on the mat.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl?
Yes. Always mirror your design before cutting HTV. This is one of the most common rookie mistakes and one of the easiest to fix.
Because you’re cutting from the back of the vinyl (carrier side down on the mat), the design has to be reversed in your software. When you flip the cut sheet over to press it onto a shirt, the design lands right-reading.
The exception is printable HTV. If you print on the printable surface, you print right-reading, not mirrored, because the print side is the side that ends up visible. We’ll cover printable HTV in detail later.
Step-by-step: how to apply heat transfer vinyl correctly
This is the workflow for standard cut HTV (Siser EasyWeed, AmeriFlex Quickweed, B-Flex Gimmie). Specialty vinyls have variations noted afterward.
1. Design and mirror
Build your design in Cricut Design Space, Silhouette Studio, Adobe Illustrator, or your plotter’s native software. Before sending to cut, flip horizontally (mirror). Every cutter has a checkbox for this. Use it.
2. Load the vinyl
Place the HTV on your cutting mat shiny side down, matte side up. The blade will cut into the matte vinyl and stop at the carrier. Standard cut settings for Siser EasyWeed on a Cricut Maker run around blade depth 3, pressure default, with a fine-point blade.
3. Cut
Use a kiss cut. The blade should cut through the vinyl and adhesive layers but leave the carrier intact. If you’re cutting through the carrier, drop your pressure or blade depth.
4. Weed
Peel away the negative space (everything that isn’t part of the design) with a weeding tool. The design stays stuck to the carrier sheet. A clean weed makes or breaks the final print.
5. Pre-press the garment
Press the blank shirt for 3–5 seconds at the vinyl’s recommended temperature. This removes moisture and flattens fibers so the HTV adheres uniformly.
6. Position and press
Place the weeded design on the shirt, shiny carrier side up. Cover with a Teflon sheet or parchment paper if the vinyl manufacturer recommends it. Most EasyWeed-style HTV presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with medium-firm pressure.
7. Peel
Check the manufacturer’s instructions for hot peel vs cold peel. Siser EasyWeed is a hot peel. AmeriFlex Quickweed is also a fast peel. Peel the carrier sheet off at a low angle in one smooth motion.
8. Post-press (optional but recommended)
Cover with parchment paper and press again for 5 seconds. This locks the adhesive and improves wash durability past 50 cycles.
Temperature and time settings by HTV type
Different vinyls cure at different temperatures. Pressing puff at 320°F will scorch it. Pressing reflective at 280°F won’t bond it. Here’s a reference table for the lines we stock.
| HTV Type | Temperature | Time | Peel | Pressure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siser EasyWeed | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Hot | Medium |
| AmeriFlex Quickweed | 290–310°F | 10–12 sec | Warm | Medium |
| AmeriFlex Quickweed Puff | 280–290°F | 10–12 sec | Cold | Medium-light |
| AmeriFlex Quickweed Glitter | 320°F | 15 sec | Cold | Medium |
| Siser Holographic | 305°F | 15 sec | Cold | Medium |
| AmeriFlex Twinkle Reflective | 305°F | 15 sec | Hot | Medium |
| AmeriFlex Quickweed Reflective HI VIS | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Cold | Medium-firm |
| B-Flex Gimmie 5 | 300°F | 15 sec | Cold | Medium |
| Siser EasySubli (printable) | 311°F | 15 sec | Cold | Medium |
These are starting points. Test on a scrap of the actual garment fabric before running the full order. Polyester, tri-blends, and 100% cotton can all want slightly different settings.
Heat transfer vinyl on polyester: the heat sensitivity problem
Polyester scorches and dye-migrates at lower temperatures than cotton. The dyes in polyester are sublimation-active above roughly 280°F, which means they turn to gas and ghost into your HTV. Your white logo on a red poly jersey turns pink three washes in.
Two solutions:
- Use a low-temp HTV. Siser EasyWeed presses as low as 255°F on stretch fabrics. AmeriFlex Quickweed has a low-temp variant. Both reduce dye migration risk.
- Use a blocker layer. Siser Adhesive (Double Sided) acts as a dye-blocking barrier between the polyester and the colored HTV on top. Press the adhesive first, then your color layer.
For sublimated polyester jerseys with names and numbers, the adhesive layer is non-negotiable if you want the print to survive 25+ washes without ghosting.
Specialty HTV: where the rules change slightly
Most HTV follows the shiny-side-down rule. A few specialty products have quirks.
Holographic HTV
Siser Holographic Heat Transfer Vinyl looks shiny on both sides. The carrier is on top of the metallic/holographic film. Use the bend test if you can’t tell. Cut with shiny carrier down, press with the carrier up. Cold peel only. Pulling the carrier hot will lift the design.
Puff HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Puff expands when heat-activated, creating a raised 3D texture. Press at the lower end of the temperature range (280–290°F) and don’t post-press, that flattens the puff back down. Cold peel. The carrier still goes shiny side down on the mat, up on the press, same as any other HTV.
Reflective HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Reflective HI VIS and AmeriFlex Twinkle Reflective reflect light from glass microbeads embedded in the vinyl. Both sides can look reflective in certain light. The adhesive side feels grippier. Carrier on bottom for cutting, on top for pressing, same rule.
Glitter HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Glitter has a textured top surface where glitter particles sit. The carrier is still clear and on top. Cut with carrier down. Glitter wants slightly more pressure and a hotter press (320°F) to bond through the textured surface.
Printable / Sublimation HTV
This is where things get genuinely different. With printable HTV, you print onto the matte adhesive side (which sits on top during printing), not the carrier. The carrier goes down through the printer and the press, the printable surface goes up.
For Foil Double Side Adhesive HTV used in foil transfer work, the application order is different again: press the adhesive first, then the foil on top, then peel. Read the spec sheet for the exact product.
Best heat transfer vinyl by use case
We carry house-brand AmeriFlex Quickweed and authorized Siser, B-Flex, and a few specialty lines. Picks below by job type.
Best all-purpose HTV
Siser EasyWeed (20” x 1 yd) is the workhorse. Cuts clean, weeds fast, presses at 305°F in 15 seconds, hot peel. It’s what most shops run for daily t-shirt work. Also available in 15” rolls and 12” rolls for smaller plotters and Cricut Maker users.
Best value HTV
B-Flex Gimmie 5 at $8.49/yd is the cost-per-shirt pick when you’re doing volume. Presses at 300°F, cold peel, holds up past 50 washes.
Best puff HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Puff (12”) at $8.99 is our house brand. Raised texture, low-temp press, no special equipment. The 20” roll is for wider plotters.
Best reflective HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Reflective HI VIS hits the ANSI 107 reflectivity threshold for safety apparel. For decorative reflective work (not safety-rated), AmeriFlex Twinkle Reflective at $9.99/yd is the cheaper choice.
Best holographic HTV
Siser Holographic at $9.99 is the standard. Cold peel, 305°F.
Best for foil transfers
Foil Double Side Adhesive is the base layer for foil work. Press adhesive first, lay foil on top, press again, peel.
Best glitter HTV
AmeriFlex Quickweed Glitter at $9.99. Textured top surface, cold peel, presses at 320°F.
How to cut heat transfer vinyl
Cut settings depend on your plotter and your vinyl. Three rules apply universally:
- Vinyl goes shiny side down on the mat. Always.
- Use a kiss cut. The blade should cut through the vinyl and adhesive but not through the carrier.
- Test cut first. Run a small square in the corner. Try to weed it. If the vinyl lifts off the carrier cleanly without the carrier tearing, you’re set. If the carrier tears, reduce pressure. If the vinyl won’t weed, increase pressure or blade depth.
Starting settings for the most common plotters:
| Plotter | Blade | Pressure | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cricut Maker (EasyWeed) | Fine point | Default | Default |
| Cricut Maker (Glitter) | Fine point | More | Default |
| Silhouette Cameo 4 | Auto blade | Blade 2, Force 5 | Speed 5 |
| Roland GS-24 | 45° blade | 80 gf | 30 cm/s |
| Graphtec CE7000 | 45° blade | 18 force | 30 cm/s |
For thicker vinyls (puff, glitter, reflective), bump pressure or blade depth. For thinner stretch vinyls, reduce pressure to avoid tearing the carrier.
How to remove heat transfer vinyl
Sometimes a print needs to come off. Wrong placement, customer reorder, salvaging blanks. Three methods, ordered by aggressiveness.
1. Heat and peel
Press the design at 305°F for 10 seconds, then immediately grab a corner with a weeding tool and peel while hot. Works on fresh applications and most EasyWeed-style vinyl. Doesn’t work well on cured prints older than 30 days.
2. Adhesive remover
Apply a citrus-based adhesive remover (Goo Gone, De-Solv-it) to the back of the print, let it sit 5–10 minutes, then peel. Wash the garment immediately after with detergent to remove residue.
3. Iron-on patch method
Heat the print to soften the adhesive, then use a butter knife or weeding tool to lift the edges. Reheat as needed. This is the slow method but it works on prints that won’t budge otherwise.
No method removes 100% of the adhesive ghost from cotton. Dark fabrics hide residue better than light fabrics. For a clean blank, restart with a new garment.
Heat transfer vinyl vs screen printing
When does HTV make sense, and when should you screen print? The short answer is volume.
| Factor | HTV | Screen Printing |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | 1–50 shirts, multi-name jobs | 50+ shirts of the same design |
| Setup cost | $0 (just cut and press) | $15–$40 per color in screens/film |
| Cost per shirt (1 color) | $2–$5 | $0.50–$1.50 at volume |
| Colors per design | 1 per layer (stacked) | Multi-color in one run |
| Hand/feel | Sits on top of fabric | Can sink into fabric (discharge, water-based) |
| Durability | 50+ washes | 80+ washes |
| Specialty effects | Puff, glitter, holographic, reflective | Discharge, suede, high-density |
HTV wins for short runs, team uniforms with individual names/numbers, and one-offs. Screen printing wins on volume and on plastisol-quality hand. Most working shops do both.
Troubleshooting common HTV problems
Vinyl won’t stick to the shirt
Cause: not enough heat, not enough time, or not enough pressure. Check your press calibration with an infrared thermometer. The dial temperature and actual platen temperature can differ by 20–40°F on older presses.
Vinyl peels up at the edges after washing
Cause: under-cured. Add 5 seconds to your press time and post-press for 5 seconds with parchment paper.
Carrier sheet won’t peel off
Cause: wrong peel temperature. Check whether the vinyl is hot, warm, or cold peel. EasyWeed peels hot. Most specialty vinyls peel cold.
Design ghosting / dye migration on polyester
Cause: polyester dye sublimating into the HTV. Use a dye-blocking adhesive layer or switch to a low-temp HTV that presses below 280°F.
Cricut is cutting through the carrier
Cause: blade depth or pressure too high. Reduce blade depth by one notch or drop pressure setting.
Glitter or puff won’t weed cleanly
Cause: under-cut. These vinyls are thicker. Increase blade depth or pressure and run another test cut.
Frequently asked questions
Which side of heat transfer vinyl goes face down?
The shiny carrier side goes face down on your cutting mat. When you press onto a shirt, the shiny carrier side goes face up. The dull, matte adhesive side touches the fabric.
Do you put HTV shiny side up on the shirt?
Yes. Shiny side up means the clear carrier sheet is facing your heat press, and the adhesive is in contact with the fabric. The carrier peels off after pressing.
Do you mirror HTV when cutting?
Yes, always mirror your design before cutting standard cut HTV. You’re cutting from the back of the vinyl, so the design has to be reversed in software. The exception is printable HTV, which is not mirrored.
What temperature do you press HTV at?
Most cut HTV presses between 290°F and 320°F for 10–15 seconds. Siser EasyWeed runs at 305°F for 15 seconds. Puff HTV runs cooler at 280–290°F. Always check the manufacturer’s spec sheet for the specific product.
How long does heat transfer vinyl last on a shirt?
Properly applied HTV lasts 50+ wash cycles before noticeable wear. Post-pressing and washing inside-out in cold water with mild detergent extends life past 80 washes. Tumble drying on low or hanging to dry helps too.
Can you put HTV on polyester?
Yes, but use a low-temperature HTV (Siser EasyWeed at 255°F or AmeriFlex low-temp) or a dye-blocking adhesive base layer. Polyester dye sublimates above 280°F and will ghost into the vinyl, causing color bleed after a few washes.
What’s the difference between HTV and printable HTV?
Standard HTV is a solid color sheet you cut and weed. Printable HTV is a white film you print full-color graphics onto with an inkjet or sublimation printer, then cut and press. Standard HTV is single-color per layer. Printable HTV handles photos and gradients.
Can you layer heat transfer vinyl?
Yes, up to about 3–4 layers before the print gets stiff and starts to crack. Press each layer for 3–5 seconds (not the full cure time) until the final layer, then do a full press. Don’t layer glitter or puff under other vinyls, the texture telegraphs through.
Do you peel HTV hot or cold?
Depends on the product. Siser EasyWeed is a hot peel. Most glitter, puff, and holographic vinyls are cold peel. Peeling cold-peel vinyl while hot will lift the design off the shirt. Check the spec sheet.
Why is my HTV not sticking?
Three common causes: temperature too low (check with an infrared thermometer, not the press dial), pressure too light, or moisture in the garment (pre-press the shirt for 3–5 seconds before applying vinyl).
Can you wash heat transfer vinyl?
Yes, after 24 hours of cure time. Wash inside-out in cold or warm water, mild detergent, no bleach. Tumble dry low or hang dry. Avoid ironing directly on the design.
What’s the best HTV for beginners?
Siser EasyWeed. It cuts clean, weeds easily, presses at a forgiving 305°F, and peels hot so you see results immediately. The 12” roll fits Cricut Maker users without trimming.
One last thing on the shiny-side-down question: if you’re ever standing at the press unsure which way to load it, the carrier is the side you can see through (even slightly). That’s the side that touches the heat. Everything else follows from that.
We stock the full AmeriFlex Quickweed line and the Siser catalog at our New Jersey warehouse, and if you’re trying to dial in settings for a specific fabric, the techs who pick your order are the same people who press test garments in the back. Send a question with your order and we’ll send back numbers that actually worked.