DTF Printing.
Full color.
No minimums.
Direct-to-Film is changing what small orders can look like. Full-color, photo-quality prints on almost any garment, with none of the setup overhead of traditional methods.
The newest tool in the shop.
DTF stands for Direct-to-Film. A full-color design is printed onto a special film, bonded with adhesive powder, and heat-pressed onto the garment. The result: photo-realistic, multi-color designs on virtually any fabric — cotton, polyester, blends, nylon, even canvas.
What makes it genuinely different: no setup cost per color, no minimum order quantities, and no fabric limitations. If screen printing is the workhorse for large, simple jobs, DTF is the specialist for complex designs, small runs, and mixed-fabric orders.
4 guides in this section.
What Is DTF Printing?
How it actually works, what it looks and feels like, and why the last three years have made it mainstream. A plain-English primer.
Read the GuideDTF vs Screen Printing — When Each Wins
Quantity, color count, garment type, durability — the four factors that decide which method fits your specific job.
Read the GuideDTF Printing Minimums, Explained
Why DTF genuinely has no minimums (unlike screen print), and when ordering more — or less — still makes sense for your budget.
Read the GuideIs DTF Durable? How It Holds Up Long-Term
What 50+ washes actually looks like, why quality DTF doesn't peel or crack, and the shop-level decisions that make the difference.
Read the GuideReady to price your DTF job?
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