Fig. I — Glossary · Updated June 2026

What Is HTV (Heat-Transfer Vinyl)?

HTV (heat-transfer vinyl) is a thin sheet of colored polyurethane with a heat-activated backing. You cut a design, weed away the excess, and heat-press it onto a garment, where it bonds as a smooth, opaque layer. It works on cotton, polyester, and blends — light or dark — and is the easiest method for small runs.

5 min readCut & pressAny fabricTees from 99¢/unit
Fig. II — The Short Version

The Short Answer

  • i

    HTV is cut-and-press vinyl — a colored polyurethane sheet with a heat-activated adhesive that you cut, weed, and press onto fabric.

  • ii

    It bonds with time, temperature, and pressure — most HTV presses at about 305–320°F for 10–15 seconds with firm pressure.

  • iii

    It's opaque and sits on top of the fabric, so it covers dark garments cleanly with no white underbase — unlike sublimation.

  • iv

    It works on almost any fabric — cotton, polyester, blends, even nylon — with smooth cotton the most forgiving surface.

  • v

    Durable but semi-permanent: quality HTV lasts 50+ washes when pressed right; wait 24 hours, then turn inside-out and wash cold.

  • vi

    Best for names, numbers, and bold solid shapes; for full-color or photographic art, DTF or screen printing win.

"HTV is the gateway method: a cutter, a heat press, and a sheet of vinyl will put a clean logo on a dark shirt — no screens, no minimum."

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

HTV vs DTF vs Screen Printing

HTV is the cut-and-press method: cheap to start, perfect for solid-color names and numbers, and unbeatable for one-off custom shirts. Here's where it sits next to the other two ways to put a logo on a blank.

How HTV compares to DTF and screen printing
AttributeHTV (Vinyl)DTF TransferScreen Printing
Color range 5.3–6.0 ozSolid colors, one per layer Full color, photographic Per-color screens
Best run size 5.3–6.0 oz1–50, simple art1–500, any art 50+ for low cost
Setup cost 5.3–6.0 ozCutter + press, no per-design feeNo setup, no minimum Per-color screen setup
Fabric 5.3–6.0 ozCotton, poly, blends, nylon Any fabric Almost any fabric
Dark garments 5.3–6.0 ozOpaque — covers darksBuilt-in white underbase Needs underbase
Small text / detail 5.3–6.0 ozLimited by weeding Excellent Good
Durability 5.3–6.0 oz50+ washes pressed right 50+ washes Gold standard, 60–100+
Blank cost at Bayou By the packFrom 99¢/unit From 99¢/unit From 99¢/unit
Fig. IV — Our Picks

Blanks That Press Clean

Real in-stock blanks for HTV jobs — cotton for the easiest press, poly for performance, and dark raglans where opaque vinyl wins. Prices shown per unit, no account.

Easiest Surface
Cotton · S–2XL

Yellow Strike Crew Neck Tee

Yellow Strike crew in smooth cotton — HTV's most forgiving surface. Cotton takes heat and bonds clean, so names, numbers, and bold shapes press crisp the first time.

S–2XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

Shop →
Poly / Low-Temp
Performance Poly · S–2XL

Space Dye Athletic Short Sleeve Tee

A space-dye athletic tee for poly jobs — press HTV cooler (around 270–300°F) to avoid scorching, and reach for stretch or low-temp vinyl on the athletic knit.

S–2XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

Shop →
Covers Darks
Dark Raglan · Through 5XL

Athletic Navy Striated Crew Neck Raglan (Plus Sizes)

Athletic Navy Striated raglan — a dark garment where HTV shines: the vinyl is opaque, so colors stay true on top with no underbase. Deep stock through 5XL.

S, L, 3XL–5XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

Shop →
Versatile
Contrast Raglan · S–3XL

Gray & Navy Contrast Long Sleeve Raglan Tee

Gray and navy contrast long-sleeve raglan — a versatile blank for left-chest logos, sleeve hits, or back numbers in any vinyl color.

S–3XL

$0.99 / Unit

$3.96 / 4-Pack

Shop →

Every blank is sold by the pack at a flat 99¢/unit, the same price in every size and pack. Stock is liquidation overstock, so colors and size runs rotate — check each product for live availability.

Fig. V — From The Press Room

Frequently Asked

This block carries FAQ schema (JSON-LD) for AEO
What is HTV (heat-transfer vinyl)?

HTV, or heat-transfer vinyl, is a thin sheet of colored polyurethane with a heat-activated adhesive on the back. You cut a design into it with a craft cutter, weed away the parts you don't want, then use a heat press or iron to bond it to a shirt. It applies as a smooth, opaque layer and is one of the easiest ways to decorate apparel in small runs.

What temperature do you press HTV at?

Most standard HTV presses at about 305–320°F for 10–15 seconds with firm, even pressure. Glitter and metallic vinyls usually want a hotter press (around 320–350°F), while delicate foil and stretch vinyls press cooler (around 270–300°F). Always follow the specific vinyl's instructions — a heat press gives far more consistent results than a household iron.

Can you use HTV on polyester?

Yes. HTV works on cotton, polyester, blends, and even nylon. On polyester and performance fabrics, press at a lower temperature (around 270–300°F) to avoid scorching or dye migration, and choose a vinyl rated for low-temp or stretch fabric. Smooth cotton is the most forgiving surface, but poly and blends bond well with the right settings.

Does HTV work on dark shirts?

Yes, and it's one of HTV's biggest advantages. Because the vinyl is opaque and sits on top of the fabric, colors stay true on black and dark garments with no white underbase needed. That's a real edge over sublimation, which is translucent and only works on light-colored polyester.

How long does HTV last?

Pressed correctly, quality HTV lasts 50 or more wash cycles and often the life of the shirt. To get there, wait at least 24 hours before the first wash, turn the garment inside-out, wash in cold water, and skip high-heat drying and ironing directly over the design. Peeling usually traces back to too little heat, time, or pressure at application.

HTV vs DTF — which is better?

HTV is best for solid-color names, numbers, and bold shapes on a budget — all you need is a cutter and a heat press, with no per-design cost. DTF (direct-to-film) prints full-color, photographic art in one pass and handles fine detail and gradients HTV can't weed. Both are heat-pressed and both work on dark garments, so the choice comes down to how much color and detail your design needs.

Fig. VI — Why Bayou

Why Buy Your Blanks From Bayou

Per-Unit Pricing

The real cost per shirt — a flat 99¢/unit, shown up front, no account, the same price in every size and pack.

Cotton, Poly & Darks

Undecorated tees in cotton, performance poly, and dark raglans through 5XL — the full range HTV presses on, in deep overstock.

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

Shop blank t-shirts.

Cotton, poly, and blend tees, light and dark, sold by the pack at a flat 99¢/unit — press-ready, no account, inspected and shipped from Hattiesburg.