Yellow Strike Crew Neck Tee
A smooth cotton crew with deep stock — the easiest surface for either method. Press a full-color DTF transfer or a crisp single-color HTV design; cotton is the most forgiving vinyl surface.
S–2XL
$3.96 / 4-Pack
DTF vs HTV comes down to color and workflow: DTF is a full-color printed transfer you press onto any fabric with no weeding, while HTV is cut sheets of solid-color vinyl — cheapest to start and great for names and numbers, but every color adds a layer to cut and weed. Multi-color art goes DTF; simple text goes HTV.
Color decides it: DTF prints unlimited colors, gradients, and photos at one price; HTV is one solid color per sheet — every extra color is another layer to cut, weed, and press.
Workflow favors DTF: a transfer arrives ready to press, no weeding. A complex 3-color HTV design can add 20–30 minutes of cutting and weeding per item.
HTV's real edge is special effects and entry cost: glitter, metallic, foil, and puff finishes DTF can't match, on gear as cheap as a craft cutter and a heat press.
Durability: quality DTF is a flexible, crack-resistant film good for 50–100 washes; HTV holds up well pressed right, but layered designs can lift at the edges sooner.
Both cover dark garments with no underbase step — HTV is opaque vinyl, and DTF's white underbase is printed into the film.
The blank costs the same either way — print-ready tees at a flat 99¢ a unit, the same in every size and pack.
— The Press Room, Bayou Blanks"If it's a photo, print a film. If it's a name and a number, cut the vinyl."
DTF and HTV both end at the same place — a heat press — but get there differently. DTF prints the whole design, colors and all, onto a film; HTV starts as solid-color vinyl you cut and weed into shape. Here's how they stack up.
| Attribute | DTF (Direct-to-Film) | HTV (Heat Transfer Vinyl) |
|---|---|---|
| What it is 5.3–6.0 oz | Full-color design printed on film, heat-pressed on | Solid-color vinyl sheet, cut and heat-pressed on |
| Colors & detail 5.3–6.0 oz | Unlimited — photos, gradients, fine text | One color per layer; bold shapes and text |
| Workflow 5.3–6.0 oz | Press and done — no weeding | Cut → weed → press, once per color |
| Special effects 5.3–6.0 oz | Standard print finish | Glitter, metallic, foil, puff, flock |
| Hand feel 5.3–6.0 oz | Thin, flexible film | Thicker; stacked layers add stiffness |
| Durability 5.3–6.0 oz | Crack-resistant, 50–100 washes | Solid pressed right; layered edges can lift sooner |
| Equipment to start 5.3–6.0 oz | Heat press + bought transfers | Vinyl cutter (~$200–500) + heat press |
| From (per unit) By the pack | $0.99 | $0.99 |
Cotton for easy pressing, darks and poly for either method — on the floor in Hattiesburg, sold by the pack. Prices shown per unit — no account.
A smooth cotton crew with deep stock — the easiest surface for either method. Press a full-color DTF transfer or a crisp single-color HTV design; cotton is the most forgiving vinyl surface.
S–2XL
$3.96 / 4-Pack
A contrast crew raglan in a full M–5XL run — the classic HTV job: team names and numbers in one bold color, one layer, no weeding marathon. DTF handles the full-color crest.
M–5XL
$3.96 / 4-Pack
Deep-stock dark athletic raglan with real 4XL–5XL depth. Darks are easy for both methods here — HTV is opaque, and DTF's white underbase is already in the film.
S, 3XL–5XL
$3.96 / 4-Pack
A polyester performance tee — press HTV at the lower temps poly needs (stretch and low-temp vinyls shine here), or skip the guesswork with a DTF transfer that bonds to any knit.
S–2XL
$3.96 / 4-Pack
Every blank presses either way at a flat 99¢/unit, the same in every size and pack. Stock is liquidation overstock, so specific colors and sizes rotate — check each product for live availability.
Neither is universally better. DTF wins on color — photos, gradients, and multi-color art print as one ready-to-press transfer with no weeding. HTV wins on special effects (glitter, metallic, foil, puff), works with gear as simple as a craft cutter and heat press, and is quick for one- or two-color designs. Complex art goes DTF; bold simple designs and effect finishes go HTV.
Usually. A quality DTF transfer cures as a thin, flexible, crack-resistant film that typically survives 50–100 washes. Single-layer HTV pressed at the right time and temperature also holds up well, but multi-layer HTV designs can lift at the edges sooner. Both last longest washed cold and inside-out.
Yes, but every color is a separate piece of vinyl — cut, weeded, aligned, and pressed as its own layer. A simple one-color design might weed in a few minutes, while a complex three-color design can add 20–30 minutes per item, and the stacked layers get thicker and stiffer. That per-color labor is exactly what DTF eliminates: all colors print at once.
For HTV: a vinyl cutter (entry machines run roughly $200–500) and a heat press. For DTF: if you buy pre-made transfers — gang sheets often work out to roughly $0.50–4 per print — the only equipment is a heat press, typically $200–300. Owning a DTF printer is a much bigger investment, which is why most small shops buy transfers instead.
Yes on both counts. Both methods cover dark garments with no underbase step — HTV is opaque vinyl, and DTF prints its white underbase into the film. On polyester, press at lower temperatures to protect the fabric: standard HTV presses around 305–320°F, with stretch and low-temp vinyls made for delicate synthetics, and DTF transfers bond to poly without dye-migration pretreatment.
A smooth cotton crew is the easiest canvas for both — vinyl grips it predictably and DTF bonds clean. Darks work fine either way, and poly tees just need lower press temps. Buying blanks by the pack at a flat 99¢ a unit keeps test presses cheap, in every size from S to 5XL at the same price.
The real cost per shirt: a flat 99¢ a unit, the same in every size and pack. Shown up front, no account, same price every size.
Smooth cotton for easy vinyl, plus poly and dark overstock DTF loves — S–5XL, print-ready, with new pallets landing weekly.
Packed and shipped from our Mississippi warehouse — central, fast, and real people on the floor.
No account, no resale certificate, no business required — buy a single pack at the same per-unit price.
Whichever transfer you press, the blank is the same flat price — cotton for easy vinyl, poly and darks for DTF, a flat 99¢ a unit, every size one price, no account, inspected and shipped from Hattiesburg.