Siser EasyWeed is a polyurethane heat transfer vinyl that presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds with medium pressure and peels warm. It’s the workhorse HTV most shops reach for on cotton, polyester, and cotton/poly blends because it’s thin, stretches with the garment, and lays down without scorching the shirt around it. We carry the full EasyWeed line in 12”, 15”, and 20” rolls.
This guide covers the working numbers: press settings, what to use it on, how it compares to other HTV types, when to grab EasyWeed Stretch or EcoStretch instead, and how to handle the problems that show up on press. If you cut and press vinyl for a living or as a serious side operation, this is the reference.
What is Siser EasyWeed heat transfer vinyl?
EasyWeed is a thin polyurethane (PU) heat transfer vinyl manufactured by Siser in Italy. The vinyl sits on a sticky polyester carrier sheet, you cut it on a vinyl cutter or plotter, weed the excess, and heat-press it onto a garment. At about 90 microns thick, it’s noticeably thinner than older PVC heat transfer materials, which is why it presses faster and feels softer on the shirt.
The “Easy” in the name is literal. The carrier holds small detail without lifting, the weed lines snap clean, and a 10–15 second press is enough for a permanent bond. Press temperature is 305°F (150°C), pressure is medium, and you peel the carrier warm.
Quick specs
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Press temperature | 305°F (150°C) |
| Press time | 10–15 seconds |
| Pressure | Medium (about 50 PSI) |
| Peel | Warm |
| Carrier | Sticky polyester |
| Material | Polyurethane (PU) |
| Thickness | ~90 microns |
| Mirror image? | Yes, always |
| Wash | After 24 hours, inside out, cold or warm |
How to use EasyWeed start to finish
The workflow is the same whether you’re running 6 shirts or 600. Skip a step and you’ll see it on the press.
1. Design and size. Build the artwork to the actual print size. For a left chest, that’s roughly 4” wide. For a full front, 11–12” wide on an adult tee.
2. Mirror the image. Always mirror EasyWeed before cutting. The vinyl is loaded carrier-side down on the mat, which means you’re cutting through the back of the material. If you don’t mirror, the design presses backwards.
3. Cut. Load with the shiny carrier side down (dull adhesive side up). On a Cricut Maker, the “Siser EasyWeed” preset works. On a Silhouette Cameo, blade depth 2, force 8, speed 5 is a solid baseline. On a Roland or Graphtec, 60-degree blade, 80–110g force, 50mm/s. Test cut a 1” square first.
4. Weed. Pull a corner of the excess vinyl off the carrier and peel away everything that isn’t part of the design. The carrier stays. Use a weeding hook for small interior pieces like the holes in a letter “A” or “O”.
5. Preheat the shirt. Press the blank garment for 2–3 seconds at 305°F to drive off moisture and flatten the surface. Skip this on dark cotton and you’ll see moisture lift the edges of the design.
6. Position and press. Carrier side up, vinyl against the shirt. Press at 305°F, 10–15 seconds, medium pressure. On a clamshell, give it the full 15. On an auto-swing or pneumatic with consistent pressure, 10 is fine.
7. Warm peel. Peel the carrier within a few seconds of opening the press, smoothly and at a low angle. If a corner lifts, drop the carrier back and press another 5 seconds.
8. Post-press. Cover the design with a Teflon sheet or parchment and give it a 2-second second press. This sets the finish and locks the bond.
Wait 24 hours before the first wash. Wash inside out, cold or warm, tumble dry low or hang dry.
EasyWeed vs other HTV types
Siser makes a deep catalog. EasyWeed is the default, but it’s not always the right call.
| Vinyl | Best on | Press temp | Press time | Use when |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EasyWeed | Cotton, poly, blends | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Standard tees, hoodies, most jobs |
| EasyWeed Stretch | Performance, lycra, spandex | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Leggings, jerseys, fitted athletic wear |
| EasyWeed EcoStretch | Recycled poly, sustainable lines | 285°F | 10–15 sec | Eco-conscious brands, stretch poly |
| EasyWeed Electric | Cotton, poly | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Metallic chrome looks, bold accents |
| EasyWeed Fluorescent | Cotton, poly | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Safety, sports, high-vis designs |
| EasyWeed Matte | Cotton, poly | 305°F | 10–15 sec | Tone-down look, no sheen, theatrical |
| Glow in the Dark | Cotton, poly | 305°F | 15 sec | Novelty, safety, kids apparel |
| EasyWeed Sub Block | Polyester (light) | 305°F | 15 sec | Blocking dye migration on poly |
The pattern: most of the EasyWeed family runs the same 305°F / 10–15 second / medium pressure / warm peel formula. That consistency is the reason shops standardize on it. You can layer EasyWeed on EasyWeed using a 2–3 second tack press between layers and a final full press at the end.
EasyWeed vs EasyWeed Stretch
The standard EasyWeed has some give, but if the garment stretches more than 20%, the print will crack on the third or fourth wear. Stretch is a different polymer formula made to flex with athletic fabrics. If the shirt is made for movement (yoga, running, performance, compression), use Siser EasyWeed Stretch or EcoStretch instead.
EasyWeed vs printable HTV
Standard EasyWeed comes in solid colors. Printable HTV is a white vinyl with an inkjet-receptive coating, designed for full-color photo or gradient prints out of a desktop inkjet printer. Different product, different workflow. If you need a photo-realistic transfer in low volume, printable HTV is the move. For text and logos in solid colors, EasyWeed wins on cost, durability, and feel.
EasyWeed vs sublimation
Sublimation isn’t HTV. Sublimation dye penetrates polyester fibers using heat. There’s no vinyl layer on top. Sublimation only works on light polyester or poly-coated substrates. EasyWeed works on cotton, poly, and blends, in any color garment. If the shirt is 100% cotton or dark, EasyWeed is your only option of the two.
Specialty EasyWeed: when to reach for which
Standard colors handle 80% of jobs. The specialty rolls earn their slot for specific looks.
Fluorescent
EasyWeed Fluorescent is built for safety apparel, sports teams, and any design where you want the color to punch under daylight or stage light. The pigment carries more saturation than standard neon colors. We stock it in 12”, 15”, and 20” rolls. Press settings are identical to standard EasyWeed.
Electric (metallic)
EasyWeed Electric has a brushed chrome / metallic mirror finish. It’s not glitter and it’s not foil. It’s a smooth metallic PU with the same press profile as standard EasyWeed. Good for athletic team names, awards apparel, and accent layers. The 15” roll runs $13.99.
Glow in the Dark
Siser Glow in the Dark HTV charges under any light and emits a green glow in the dark for several minutes. Press 15 seconds at 305°F. We carry 13.5” and 20” rolls. Wash care matters more here: cold wash, no bleach, hang dry. Bleach kills the phosphor.
Matte
EasyWeed Matte drops the slight semi-gloss of standard EasyWeed. Same polymer, different surface finish. Useful when you want the design to read as part of the garment instead of an applied layer. Theater costuming, fashion lines, and tone-on-tone designs use it heavily.
Sub Block (for polyester dye migration)
When you press anything onto 100% polyester, the disperse dyes in the fabric can migrate into the vinyl during the press cycle. White vinyl turns pink on red shirts, gray on navy shirts, etc. EasyWeed Sub Block is a barrier layer that stops the dye. Press the Sub Block first, then layer your color EasyWeed on top.
Best EasyWeed picks for working shops
Standard 15” EasyWeed in your top 6 colors covers most of the work that comes through. Here’s how we’d stock a shop from scratch.
Core inventory (start here):
- Siser EasyWeed 15” x 1 YD in black, white, red, navy, royal, athletic gold. $10.99 each. The 15” width fits a left chest and most adult full-front prints.
- Siser EasyWeed 20” x 1 YD for oversized prints and back prints. $12.49.
Athletic and performance:
- Siser EasyWeed Stretch 15”. Starts at $4.99 for short cuts. Use on any performance fabric.
- Siser EasyWeed EcoStretch 20”. $14.49. Recycled polyester carrier, lower press temp (285°F), works on sustainable apparel lines.
Specialty:
- Siser EasyWeed Electric 15”. $13.99. Metallic accents.
- Siser EasyWeed Fluorescent 15”. $12.49. Safety and sports.
- Siser EasyWeed Matte 12”. $10.99. Flat finish.
- Siser Glow in the Dark 20”. $21.49. Novelty and seasonal.
For shops running mostly left-chest and youth sizes, the 12” rolls keep waste down. For full-back prints, the 20” rolls are the only sensible width.
Cutting EasyWeed: settings by machine
Cutter settings drift based on blade wear, mat tack, and vinyl batch. Always test cut a 1” square or a 0.5” letter “S” before running production.
| Cutter | Blade | Force | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cricut Maker / Maker 3 | Fine-point | “Siser EasyWeed” preset | Default |
| Cricut Explore Air 2 | Fine-point | Custom: Siser EasyWeed | Default |
| Silhouette Cameo 4 | Ratchet blade depth 2 | Force 8 | Speed 5 |
| Roland GS-24 / GR | 60° | 80–110g | 50 mm/s |
| Graphtec CE7000 / FC | 45–60° | 14–18 (machine units) | 30 cm/s |
| GCC Expert / Jaguar | 45° | 80g | 40 cm/s |
A clean cut “kiss cuts” the vinyl. The blade cuts through the PU layer but not through the polyester carrier underneath. If you’re cutting through the carrier, drop the force. If the vinyl is tearing or lifting on weed, raise the force or change the blade.
A 60-degree blade lasts about 250–400 yards of EasyWeed before it starts dragging on small detail. Swap blades on a schedule, not when the cuts go bad.
Troubleshooting EasyWeed problems
Most EasyWeed failures trace back to four things: pressure, temperature, time, or moisture. Work through them in that order.
Vinyl lifts at the edges after pressing
Pressure is light or the platen has a cold spot. Check pressure with a press test (slide a dollar bill under the platen, it should require firm tug to remove). Re-press the design for 5–8 seconds with a Teflon cover sheet. If lift continues, the heat platen may need re-calibration.
Design peels off in the wash
The press was too short or too cool. EasyWeed needs the full 10–15 seconds at 305°F to fully activate the adhesive. Use a laser thermometer to verify your platen temperature against what the press display claims. Off-brand presses often run 15–25°F cooler than displayed.
Carrier won’t release on warm peel
Two causes. Either the press was too short (the adhesive didn’t activate fully) and the vinyl is sticking to the carrier instead of the shirt, or you waited too long and the carrier has cooled past the warm-peel window. Re-press 5 seconds and peel immediately.
Cracking after a few washes on athletic shirts
Standard EasyWeed on a high-stretch fabric. Switch to EasyWeed Stretch or EcoStretch on any garment marketed as performance, compression, or activewear.
Color of vinyl turning pink, yellow, or gray on polyester
Dye migration. The disperse dyes in polyester sublimate at press temperatures and bleed into the vinyl. Use EasyWeed Sub Block as a base layer under your color vinyl. Or lower the press temperature to 285°F using EasyWeed EcoStretch where rated.
Glitter or specialty layers won’t bond on top of EasyWeed
Standard EasyWeed accepts most Siser layered HTV. If you’re layering, do a 2–3 second tack press on the bottom layer, peel, then position and press the top layer for the full 10–15 seconds. Don’t full-press both layers separately, you’ll over-bake the first one.
Vinyl tearing on the cutter
Blade is dull, force is too high, or both. Try a fresh 60-degree blade and a test cut. EasyWeed cuts clean. If the cutter is tearing, it’s a cutter problem, not a vinyl problem.
Frequently asked questions
Do you mirror Siser EasyWeed?
Yes. Always mirror EasyWeed before cutting. The vinyl is loaded carrier-side down, which means you’re cutting through the back. If you don’t mirror, the design presses to the shirt backwards. This applies to every color and every variant of EasyWeed.
Which side of EasyWeed goes down on the cutter?
Shiny carrier side down on the mat, dull adhesive side up. The blade cuts through the dull PU layer and stops at the shiny carrier. This is opposite of adhesive vinyl (Oracal 651 / 631), which catches a lot of people the first week they switch between the two.
Which side of EasyWeed goes down on the shirt?
Carrier side up, sticky side down. The carrier protects the design during pressing and peels off afterward. You’re seeing the shiny clear plastic on top of the vinyl as you slide it into the press.
What temperature do I press Siser EasyWeed at?
305°F (150°C) for 10–15 seconds with medium pressure. Warm peel. These settings apply to most of the EasyWeed family. EcoStretch is the exception at 285°F.
Can EasyWeed be used on 100% polyester?
Yes, but you’ll see dye migration on dark and bright polyesters. Use EasyWeed Sub Block as a barrier layer first, then your color EasyWeed on top. Or use EcoStretch, which presses at a lower 285°F and reduces dye activation.
How long does EasyWeed last on a shirt?
A correctly pressed EasyWeed design holds up to 50+ wash cycles when washed inside out in cold or warm water and tumble dried low. Most failures we see in customer feedback trace back to under-pressing, not the material itself.
Can you layer EasyWeed?
Yes. Press the bottom layer for 2–3 seconds (tack press), peel the carrier, position the next layer, repeat. After the final layer is positioned, do one full 10–15 second press to bond everything. Don’t full-press each layer separately or the bottom layers will over-cook.
What’s the difference between EasyWeed and EasyWeed Stretch?
Standard EasyWeed flexes some but cracks on high-stretch performance fabric. EasyWeed Stretch uses a different polymer that flexes with lycra, spandex, and athletic poly without cracking. If the garment is performance wear, use Stretch or EcoStretch.
Is Siser EasyWeed safe for a home iron?
It can be done, but a household iron doesn’t hold consistent temperature or even pressure. Expect peeling within 5–10 washes. For real production, a clamshell heat press is the minimum tool. Hobby Cricut presses (Easy Press 2, Easy Press 3) at the 305°F / 15 second setting work for low volume.
How much does Siser EasyWeed cost per shirt?
A 15” x 1 yard roll of standard EasyWeed runs $10.99 and yields roughly 12–18 left-chest prints depending on layout. That’s about $0.60–$0.90 of material per shirt for a 4” wide design.
Can EasyWeed be sublimated?
No. EasyWeed is solid color polyurethane and won’t accept sublimation dye. If you need a printable / sublimatable surface, use Siser ColorPrint Easy, EasySubli, or printable HTV designed for inkjet.
Where can I buy Siser EasyWeed near me?
We ship Siser EasyWeed out of New Jersey. Orders placed by 2 PM Eastern usually leave the same day, which puts most East Coast shops in next-day or two-day delivery. The full Siser EasyWeed catalog is at totalink.com.
What’s the shelf life of unopened EasyWeed rolls?
Stored at room temperature, away from direct sunlight, sealed in the original packaging, EasyWeed holds full performance for 2+ years. Old vinyl shows up as carriers that won’t release cleanly or adhesive that won’t bond. If a roll has been sitting on a shelf for 3+ years, test before running a real job.
If you’re standardizing a shop on one HTV line, EasyWeed at 305°F for 12 seconds is the closest thing to a default that exists in this category. Stock black, white, and your three most-ordered team colors in 15”, add Stretch for any athletic work, and you’ll cover 90% of incoming jobs without rethinking press settings. We keep the full Siser EasyWeed catalog in stock and ready to ship, so when a Friday rush job needs 6 rolls of athletic gold by Monday, that’s a phone call you can make.