Fig. I — Buying Guide · Updated June 2026

Embroidery vs Screen Printing

Embroidery vs screen printing comes down to look, fabric, and run size: embroidery stitches thread for a premium, near-permanent finish on polos, fleece, and caps, while screen printing lays ink for bold, large, low-cost graphics on tees at volume. Blanks for both start at 99¢/unit by the pack.

6 min read2 methods compared4 blank picksFrom 99¢/unit
Fig. II — The Short Version

The Short Answer

  • i

    The choice comes down to look, fabric, and run: embroidery for premium stitched logos, screen printing for bold, large, low-cost graphics.

  • ii

    Embroidery stitches thread into the fabric for a raised, near-permanent finish that lasts the life of the garment; screen printing lays ink flat and holds 40–60+ washes.

  • iii

    Embroidery looks most premium on structured garments — polos, fleece, jackets, and caps; screen printing looks best on tees and hoodies.

  • iv

    Embroidery is priced by stitch count, so added colors are free once the logo is digitized; screen printing charges per color, with a screen set up for each.

  • v

    Screen printing is cheapest per shirt at volume for big runs of few-color art; embroidery wins small runs and simple logos, with lower minimums (often 6+).

  • vi

    The blank costs the same either way — tees and polos a flat 99¢/unit, fleece $1.50/unit, the same per-unit price at every pack and size.

"Stitch the polos and fleece, screen the tees: logos and longevity go to thread, bold graphics and volume go to ink."

— The Press Room, Bayou Blanks
Fig. III — Side By Side

Two Methods, Compared

Embroidery and screen printing solve different jobs. One stitches thread for a premium, lasting logo; the other lays ink for bold, large, low-cost graphics. The right call depends on the garment, the design, and how many you're making. Here's how they stack up.

Embroidery vs screen printing, head to head
AttributeEmbroideryScreen Printing
Best for 5.3–6.0 ozLogos on polos, fleece, caps, uniformsTees & hoodies, bold or large graphics
Look & feel 5.3–6.0 ozRaised, dimensional stitched thread Flat ink, smooth on the fabric
Color & detail 5.3–6.0 ozSolid thread colors; photos/gradients hard Bold spot colors to full-color, large coverage
Best fabric 5.3–6.0 ozDense & structured — piqué polos, fleece, twill Almost any — cotton, blends, poly, darks
Durability 5.3–6.0 ozLasts the life of the garment — won't crack or fade40–60+ washes; heavy plastisol can crack over years
Minimums 5.3–6.0 ozLow — often 6+ piecesUsually 25+; setup pays off across a batch
Cost driver 5.3–6.0 ozPer stitch count (colors free once digitized) Per color (one screen each)
From (per unit) By the pack99¢ polo · $1.50 fleece $2 tee
Fig. IV — Our Picks

Blanks for Both Methods, In Stock

Structured polos and fleece that grip stitches, plus smooth cotton tees for bold screen prints — on the floor in Hattiesburg, sold by the pack. Prices shown per unit, no account.

Embroidery-Ready
Embroidery · Textured Knit

Slate Gray Striated Polo

A structured striated-knit polo — embroidery's natural home. The textured surface grips stitches and resists puckering, so a left-chest logo lays clean and crisp with a cut-away stabilizer.

S, M, L, 2XL–5XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

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Screen-Ready
Screen · 100% Cotton

Yellow Strike Crew Neck Tee

A smooth cotton crew with deep stock — the classic screen-print blank. The tight, even knit holds bold spot colors and large graphics flat and sharp.

S–2XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

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Deepest Stock
Embroidery · Fleece

Classic Gold Long Sleeve Pullover Fleece

A midweight pullover fleece with deep stock — cotton-rich fleece embroiders cleanly with a cut-away backing for a premium left-chest crest. It screen-prints well too.

S–3XL

$1.50 / Unit

$6.00 / 4-Pack

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S–5XL
Screen · Big Runs

Contrast Short Sleeve Crew Neck Raglan Tee (2G08)

A contrast crew raglan in a full size run — built for bold screen graphics across a big order, with extended sizes that hold one flat price.

S–5XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

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Tees and polos are a flat 99¢/unit, fleece $1.50/unit — the same per-unit price whether you buy a 4-pack or a 12-pack, same price across every size. Stock is liquidation overstock, so specific colors and sizes rotate — check each product for live availability.

Fig. V — From The Press Room

Frequently Asked

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Is embroidery or screen printing better?

Neither is universally better — it depends on the garment, the design, and the run. Embroidery gives a premium, near-permanent finish for logos on structured garments like polos, fleece, and caps. Screen printing wins bold, large, or full-color graphics on tees and hoodies, at the lowest per-shirt cost once the run gets big.

Which lasts longer, embroidery or screen printing?

Embroidery generally lasts longest — the polyester thread is stitched into the fabric and won't crack, peel, or fade, so it often outlives the garment. Quality screen printing holds up well too (typically 40–60+ washes, and premium plastisol for years), but ink can eventually fade or crack, especially on large solid prints.

Is embroidery more expensive than screen printing?

For small orders and simple logos, embroidery is often competitive or cheaper — it has low minimums and no per-color charge. For large runs of bold, few-color designs, screen printing is cheaper per shirt because the setup cost spreads across the batch. Embroidery is priced by stitch count; screen printing by the number of colors. The blank itself costs the same either way.

What garments work best for embroidery?

Dense, structured pieces hold stitches best: piqué polos, fleece and sweatshirts, twill caps, jackets, and woven button-downs. Lightweight single-jersey tees can pucker under heavy stitching, so on a thin tee embroidery is usually limited to a small left-chest logo with a cut-away stabilizer.

Can you embroider a t-shirt?

Yes, but keep it small. A left-chest logo or a sleeve hit works well with the right cut-away backing. Large or dense designs can distort a thin jersey tee, so for big graphics on a t-shirt, screen printing (or DTF) is the better fit.

Does embroidery or screen printing look more premium?

Embroidery reads as higher-end — the raised, dimensional thread signals quality, which is why it's the standard for corporate polos, uniforms, and caps. Screen printing looks best for casual, graphic-forward tees and hoodies where you want bold color and large coverage.

Fig. VI — Why Bayou

Why Buy Your Blanks From Bayou

Per-Unit Pricing

The real cost per piece — tees and polos a flat 99¢/unit, fleece $1.50/unit. Shown up front, no account, same price every size and pack.

Embroidery & Screen Blanks

Structured polos and fleece that grip stitches, plus smooth cotton tees for bold screen prints — S–5XL, print-ready, with new pallets landing weekly.

Ships From Hattiesburg

Packed and shipped from our Mississippi warehouse — central, fast, and real people on the floor.

Open To Anyone

No account, no resale certificate, no business required — buy a single pack at the same per-unit price.

Fig. VIII — Start Your Run

Pick your blank.

Whichever way you decorate — stitched or screened — the blank is the same flat price. Structured polos and fleece for embroidery, smooth cotton tees for screen printing, from 99¢/unit, every size one price, no account, inspected and shipped from Hattiesburg.