Heat transfer vinyl (HTV) is a thin, heat-activated polyurethane film with a pressure-sensitive carrier sheet. You cut a design on a vinyl cutter, weed the excess, then press it onto fabric at 305–320°F for 10–15 seconds to bond it to the garment. That’s the whole technology in one paragraph. The rest of this article covers the parts that decide whether your prints last 50 washes or peel off at 5.
We sell HTV to shops running 200-piece custom orders, decorators doing one-offs out of a garage, and team-uniform operations that need reflective stripes and numbers by Friday. The questions are always the same: which vinyl for which fabric, what temperature, mirror or no mirror, why is the corner lifting. This guide answers all of it.
What is heat transfer vinyl?
HTV is a multi-layer film built for garment decoration. The bottom layer is the colored or specialty polyurethane that becomes your design. The top layer is a clear carrier sheet (sometimes called a liner) that holds the cut shapes in place during pressing. A heat-activated adhesive sits between the vinyl and the fabric and bonds at temperatures between 270°F and 320°F depending on the product.
The workflow is short:
- Design the artwork in your cutter’s software.
- Mirror the design horizontally.
- Cut on a vinyl cutter (Cricut, Silhouette, Roland, Graphtec) with the shiny carrier side up.
- Weed the excess vinyl away from the carrier.
- Press onto the garment at the recommended temperature, time, and pressure.
- Peel the carrier hot or cold based on the product spec.
HTV competes with screen printing, DTF (direct-to-film), and sublimation. It wins on short runs, full-color customization without screens, and specialty finishes (glitter, puff, reflective, holographic) that other methods can’t easily replicate.
How HTV works on the press
The adhesive layer on the back of HTV activates with heat and pressure. Too little of either and the vinyl peels. Too much and the polyurethane scorches or the adhesive bleeds through the fabric. The sweet spot for most cotton HTV is 305°F, 10–15 seconds, medium-firm pressure (around 40–50 psi on an air press).
A few rules that hold across almost every product we sell:
- Pre-press the garment for 2–3 seconds before laying down the vinyl. This drives out moisture and gives the adhesive a flat, dry surface to bond to.
- Use a Teflon sheet or parchment paper on top of the carrier during pressing. It protects the platen and prevents shine marks on dark garments.
- Re-press for 5 seconds after peeling, with the Teflon sheet down. This locks in the adhesive and improves wash durability.
- Test wash before running production. Five wash cycles inside-out on warm tells you whether the bond is real.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl?
Yes. Almost always. HTV cuts with the colored side down and the carrier sheet up, so your design needs to be flipped horizontally in the software before cutting. If you don’t mirror, the text reads backwards on the shirt.
The only exception is printable HTV (inkjet or sublimation HTV), which you print on the top surface and cut without mirroring because the carrier comes off after pressing, not before cutting.
Which side goes down?
The shiny carrier side goes up when you cut. After weeding, the shiny carrier goes face-up on the garment, with the dull adhesive side pressed against the fabric. If you flip it the wrong way, the carrier melts onto your platen and the vinyl never bonds.
Quick check: if you can scratch the surface with a fingernail and feel a slight texture (the cut edges of the vinyl), that’s the bottom side facing you. Flip it so the smooth, glossy plastic faces up before pressing.
HTV vs DTF vs screen printing
Each method earns its keep on different jobs. HTV is best for solid-color designs, names and numbers, and specialty finishes on short runs. DTF wins on full-color photographic art across any fabric. Screen printing wins on volume (50+ pieces of the same design).
| Method | Best for | Min order | Cost per piece (1-color) | Wash life |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HTV | Names, numbers, specialty finishes, 1–50 pieces | 1 | $1.50–$4.00 | 50+ washes |
| DTF | Full-color art, mixed fabrics, 1–100 pieces | 1 | $2.50–$6.00 | 40–60 washes |
| Screen printing | Solid-color art, 50+ pieces | 12–24 typical | $0.75–$2.00 at volume | 80+ washes |
| Sublimation | Light polyester, all-over prints | 1 | $1.00–$3.00 | Permanent (dye-based) |
If a customer wants 6 jerseys with player names and numbers, HTV is the answer. If they want 200 shirts with a one-color logo, screen-print it. If they want 12 shirts with a photo print on a tri-blend, DTF wins.
Types of HTV and what each one does
The HTV category has expanded well past plain matte colors. Each specialty type has a different construction, a different press temperature, and a different use case.
Standard PU (polyurethane) HTV
The default. Thin, soft hand, presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds. Works on cotton, polyester, cotton-poly blends, and most tri-blends. Siser® Easyweed Heat Transfer Vinyl in 12” rolls is the workhorse for most shops. The 15” roll and 20” roll versions cover wider designs and team jerseys.
For high-volume team work, B-Flex Gimmie 5 HTV presses fast (5 seconds at 305°F) and weeds cleanly, which matters when you’re cutting 80 names in an afternoon.
Glitter HTV
Glitter HTV embeds metallic flake into the polyurethane. It presses hotter (320°F, 15 seconds) because the thicker construction needs more energy to bond. Quickweed™ Glitter Heat Transfer Vinyl is our house Ameriflex line. It cuts clean on a Cricut blade at standard glitter settings and survives 50+ wash cycles when applied correctly.
Glitter is a top-layer-only material. You don’t layer other vinyl on top of it because the textured surface won’t bond. If a design calls for glitter plus a second color, put the glitter on top and use a Teflon sheet during the final press.
Holographic HTV
Holographic HTV uses a metallic film with a rainbow refraction pattern. It catches light and shifts color depending on angle. Good for nightlife, dance teams, and youth athletic uniforms. Press at 305°F for 15 seconds with medium pressure. Cold peel only. Hot peeling lifts the holographic film off the carrier and ruins the design.
Reflective HTV
Reflective HTV uses tiny glass beads bonded into the polyurethane that bounce light back at the source. It’s required by ANSI standards for high-visibility safety apparel and popular for running gear and bike apparel. Quickweed™ Reflective HI VIS Heat Transfer Vinyl is the choice for safety stripes and logos. Twinkle Reflective HTV is the softer, fashion-grade version for retail apparel.
Reflective presses at 305°F, 10–15 seconds, cold peel. The glass beads can shed if you over-press, so stay at the lower end of the time range and verify with a test piece.
3D puff HTV
Puff HTV expands when heated, creating a raised, dimensional print. The vinyl puffs roughly 1–2mm above the surface, giving a tactile feel similar to a high-density screen print. Quickweed™ Puff Heat Transfer Vinyl in 12” and the 20” roll are the formats most shops keep stocked.
Press puff HTV at 320°F for 15 seconds, medium pressure. Peel hot. The puff effect develops fully during the peel, so don’t wait for it to cool. Keep design elements at least 1/4” thick for a clean puff (thin lines don’t expand properly).
Metallic and foil HTV
Metallic and foil HTV mimic the look of polished chrome, gold, or rose gold. Quickweed™ FoilFlex HTV gives a true mirror-foil finish that holds up through machine washing. Press at 305°F for 10 seconds, cold peel.
Gold metallic HTV is a perennial seller for team championship apparel and bachelorette work. Stock a roll. You’ll use it.
Matte HTV
Matte HTV is a non-reflective alternative to standard PU. Useful when you want a flat, premium look without any sheen, like minimalist logos on heathered shirts. Quickweed™ Matte HTV presses at 305°F for 10 seconds.
Printable HTV (inkjet and sublimation)
Printable HTV lets you print full-color artwork directly onto the vinyl using an inkjet or sublimation printer, then cut and press. This is how you do photographic transfers without owning a DTF setup. Look for Siser printable HTV for compatible inkjet workflows. Print first, contour-cut second, weed, then press at 305°F for 15 seconds.
Sublimation HTV is a separate beast. It’s a clear or white film that accepts sublimation dye and lets you sub onto cotton (which doesn’t normally take sublimation). Press the sub paper onto the HTV first, then press the HTV onto the cotton shirt.
Flock HTV
Flock HTV has a soft, velvety fiber surface that feels like felt. Used for vintage athletic looks and premium logo work. Press at 320°F for 15 seconds, cold peel. Flock is thicker than standard HTV, so allow extra weed time and use a sharper blade (60° instead of 45°).
Glow-in-the-dark HTV
Specialty product for Halloween apparel, safety gear, and novelty designs. Siser® Glow in the Dark HTV charges under any light source and glows for 3–8 minutes after exposure. Press at 305°F for 10–15 seconds.
HTV on polyester (and why it matters)
Polyester throws two problems at HTV: dye migration and lower heat tolerance. Dye migration happens when polyester’s sublimation dye reactivates under heat and bleeds into the vinyl, turning a white print pink on a red shirt. Lower heat tolerance means standard 320°F presses can scorch the fabric.
Rules for HTV on polyester:
- Use a low-temperature HTV rated for polyester (270–290°F). Many EasyWeed-class vinyls have a polyester-specific version.
- Press at the lowest temperature that bonds, usually 270–285°F for 10–15 seconds.
- Use a blocker vinyl on red, navy, and royal poly. A white blocker layer goes down first and prevents dye migration into your top color.
- Cool the garment before peeling on dye-prone colors. Hot peeling can pull migrated dye up into the carrier.
For 100% polyester athletic jerseys, this is non-negotiable. We’ve seen shops lose entire team orders to pink-tinted white numbers because they pressed standard HTV at 320°F on red poly.
How to cut heat transfer vinyl
Settings vary by cutter and blade, but the principles are the same.
- Carrier side up. The shiny side faces the blade.
- Blade depth: enough to cut the vinyl and the adhesive, not the carrier. A kiss-cut. If you cut through the carrier, the design falls apart during weeding.
- Force/pressure: start at the manufacturer’s recommended setting and adjust. Standard EasyWeed cuts at around 60g on a Cricut, 90g on a Silhouette Cameo. Glitter and flock need 30–50% more force.
- Blade angle: 45° for standard HTV, 60° for thick specialty (flock, glitter, holographic).
- Test cut before the real cut. Every time. A 1” square in the corner of the material tells you whether your settings are right.
Mirror the design horizontally before sending it to the cutter. This is the single most common mistake we hear about on the phone.
How to apply heat transfer vinyl
A clean application workflow looks like this:
- Pre-press the garment at 305°F for 2–3 seconds to remove moisture.
- Position the weeded design carrier-side up on the garment. Use a ruler or alignment tool for placement (4” down from the collar for chest logos is standard).
- Press at the recommended temp/time/pressure for the specific HTV. Standard PU: 305°F, 10–15 seconds, medium-firm pressure.
- Peel the carrier hot or cold per the spec sheet. Most EasyWeed-class HTV is warm peel.
- Cover with a Teflon sheet and re-press for 5 seconds. This finishes the bond.
- Cool, then test. Stretch the print gently. If the corners stay down and the surface doesn’t crack, you’re good.
A heat press is the right tool. A household iron will get small designs to bond, but the pressure is uneven and the temperature drifts. If you’re doing this for money, get a clamshell or swing-away press with a digital controller.
How to remove heat transfer vinyl
You’ll need to do this when a customer wants a re-do, when you misalign a number on a $40 jersey, or when you’re stripping returned merchandise. Three methods work:
- Heat and peel. Press the vinyl at 305°F for 10 seconds to soften the adhesive, then pull the corner with tweezers while it’s hot. Works best on recently applied vinyl.
- Vinyl remover solvent. Commercial HTV removers soak through the carrier-side and dissolve the adhesive. Apply, wait 1–2 minutes, scrape with a plastic spatula. Test on a hidden area first because some removers can affect garment dye.
- Iron and paper. Place parchment paper over the design, iron at high heat for 20 seconds, then peel the paper. The vinyl transfers to the paper. Repeat until clean.
None of these is perfect. Expect some adhesive residue, and expect some garments (especially polyester) to show a faint ghost where the vinyl used to be. For valuable garments, remove and replace with a slightly larger design that covers the ghost.
Custom and printed HTV
Two paths exist for “custom” HTV:
- Custom-cut HTV designs from solid-color rolls. This is what most shops mean: cut your customer’s logo from EasyWeed, weed it, press it. Order quantities of 1.
- Custom printed HTV for full-color art. You print on inkjet or sublimation HTV, contour-cut, and press. This delivers photographic detail without DTF investment.
The second path is where shops without DTF capacity compete on full-color jobs. The hand is slightly thicker than DTF, but the durability is comparable and the equipment investment is lower (any inkjet, any cutter, any heat press).
Buying HTV: rolls vs sheets
Sheets work for one-offs and small jobs. Rolls work for any shop running more than a few designs a week.
| Format | Best for | Cost per square foot |
|---|---|---|
| 12” × 15” sheets | One-offs, hobbyists, color samples | $0.80–$1.50 |
| 12” × 1 yard rolls | Small shops, garage operations | $0.50–$0.85 |
| 15” × 1 yard rolls | Medium shops, chest prints | $0.55–$0.90 |
| 20” × 1 yard rolls | Team uniforms, back prints | $0.45–$0.80 |
| 20” × 5+ yard rolls | High-volume production | $0.35–$0.65 |
If you’re cutting numbers for jerseys, a 20” roll is mandatory because letters and numbers above 8” tall won’t fit on a 12” roll.
Troubleshooting common HTV problems
The vinyl peels at the edges after pressing. Press temperature too low, time too short, or pressure too light. Re-press at 305°F for 10 more seconds with firm pressure. If it still peels, the adhesive never activated and you need a fresh piece.
The vinyl peels in the wash. Same root cause. The bond never fully formed. Always do a 5-cycle test wash before running production.
The design cracks after a few washes. Wrong vinyl for the fabric, or the customer is using high-heat drying. HTV on stretchy athletic poly needs stretch-rated vinyl (EasyWeed Stretch or equivalent). Standard PU will crack on heavy stretch.
White HTV turned pink on a red shirt. Dye migration. Use low-temp polyester HTV plus a white blocker layer. Press at 275–285°F instead of 305°F.
Glitter shedding off the design. Over-pressed. Drop time by 3–5 seconds and use medium pressure instead of firm.
Carrier sheet won’t peel cleanly. Wrong peel temp. Hot-peel vinyls need to be peeled within 5 seconds of pressing. Cold-peel vinyls need to fully cool first. Check the spec sheet for the specific product.
Vinyl shifts during pressing. Use heat-resistant tape to hold the carrier in place, especially on slick poly or nylon. Three small pieces of tape on the corners stops 95% of slippage.
Shiny rectangles around the design. That’s a press mark from the platen. Use a Teflon sheet on top during pressing, or use a press pillow under the garment to lift the print area away from the seams and tags.
Best HTV for shirts: our recommendations
For a working shop, three rolls cover 80% of jobs:
- A reliable standard PU in 15” or 20” for chest prints, back prints, and most names/numbers. Siser EasyWeed 15” is the default.
- A specialty roll based on your customer mix. Teams need reflective and metallic. Boutique work needs glitter and puff.
- A fast-press production vinyl for volume work. B-Flex Gimmie 5 cuts your press time in half on big runs.
Stock white, black, and red at minimum. Royal, gold, and gray fill out the second tier. Past that, order specialty colors per job.
Frequently asked questions
What is heat transfer vinyl made of?
HTV is a polyurethane film with a heat-activated adhesive backing and a clear pressure-sensitive carrier sheet on top. The polyurethane is the colored or specialty material you see on the finished shirt. Specialty types add glitter flakes, glass beads (reflective), foaming agents (puff), or metallic films to the base polyurethane.
How long does HTV last?
Properly applied HTV survives 50+ wash cycles before showing wear. Premium vinyls like EasyWeed and Ameriflex Quickweed hit 80+ washes in our testing when pressed at the right temperature and dried on low or air. Cracking and lifting before 30 washes almost always means under-pressing.
Can you layer HTV?
Yes. Standard PU HTV layers cleanly up to 3–4 colors. Always press the bottom layer first for 2–3 seconds (a tack press), then add the next layer and full-press. Glitter, flock, and reflective vinyls cannot have other vinyl pressed on top of them, so they must always be the top layer.
Do you mirror HTV when cutting?
Yes, mirror standard HTV horizontally before cutting because you cut with the colored side down. The exception is printable HTV (inkjet or sublimation), which you don’t mirror because the design is printed on top and the carrier comes off after pressing.
What temperature do you press HTV at?
Standard PU HTV presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds. Glitter, puff, and flock press at 320°F for 15 seconds. Polyester-specific HTV presses at 270–285°F. Always check the manufacturer spec sheet for the exact product.
Can HTV go on polyester?
Yes, but use a low-temperature HTV rated for polyester and press at 270–285°F to avoid scorching. On red, navy, and royal poly, add a white blocker layer underneath your top color to prevent dye migration.
What’s the difference between HTV and iron-on?
They’re the same product. “Iron-on” is the consumer/Cricut-marketing term for HTV. The technology, application method, and materials are identical. A heat press gives more consistent results than an iron, but the vinyl is the same.
Can you put HTV on a hat?
Yes, with a hat press. Standard flat heat presses don’t apply even pressure to a curved crown. Use a cap press with the right platen size and press at 305°F for 10 seconds with firm pressure. Stretch-rated HTV holds up better on the curved surface.
How do you remove HTV from a shirt?
Heat the vinyl at 305°F for 10 seconds and peel it off with tweezers while warm. For stubborn residue, use a commercial HTV remover solvent or place parchment paper over the design, iron for 20 seconds, and peel the paper to lift the vinyl off.
What’s the best HTV for beginners?
EasyWeed-class standard PU vinyl. It cuts cleanly at default Cricut and Silhouette settings, weeds easily because the carrier holds tight, and presses at a forgiving 305°F for 10–15 seconds. Siser EasyWeed in 12” is the standard entry-point roll.
What cutter do I need for HTV?
Any vinyl cutter works. Cricut Maker and Silhouette Cameo handle hobbyist and small-shop volume. For production work (50+ shirts per day), step up to a Roland GS-24 or Graphtec CE7000. Blade type matters more than the machine: 45° for standard, 60° for thick specialty vinyls.
Why is my HTV not sticking?
Three causes account for 90% of failures: temperature too low, time too short, or pressure too light. Verify your press with a temp strip (platen temps drift), increase press time by 3–5 seconds, and apply firm pressure (40–50 psi on an air press). Re-press for 5 seconds after peeling to lock in the bond.
If you’re standing in front of a press right now trying to figure out which roll fits the job, the short answer is start with a 15” EasyWeed in white, black, and red, and add specialty types as the orders demand them. We stock the full Quickweed and Siser lines in our New Jersey warehouse and ship same-day on weekday orders placed before 3pm.