Iv been using the htvront for dark and white coloured garments and iv done multiple wash test with about 10 different T-Shirts and their is only 1 image that I'm having issues with after 1 wash cycle. But all the rest of the images are perfectly fine after multiple washes. It definitely is a game changer for small printing businesses or crafters who want to sublimate onto 100% cotton tees.
Why do you put the white in the bottom? All you need is the clear htv ront and the sublimation image on top. Your putting to many vinyls on a shirt. Its going to feel like a big puffed out patch
@@LeslieIrene he was saying that you didn’t need the first white layer of HTV that you placed because the fabric was already white. White base layer goes first on dark fabrics.
Couldn’t you only used clear htv ront ontothe whites fabric
Yes you can use it on white fabric. But people also use it on white HTV to be able to do it on fabrics that are not white.
But y do you need to use both? Do you need the 2nd clear one to sublimate on it?
Yes I am pretty sure you cannot sub directly on the white HTV. I will have to try it at some point to know.
@@LeslieIrene HTVRont also makes Sublimation HTV for Dark Fabrics that is a white HTV.
How well does this hold up from multiple washings?
I will have to do a test. I honestly don’t know.
Iv been using the htvront for dark and white coloured garments and iv done multiple wash test with about 10 different T-Shirts and their is only 1 image that I'm having issues with after 1 wash cycle. But all the rest of the images are perfectly fine after multiple washes. It definitely is a game changer for small printing businesses or crafters who want to sublimate onto 100% cotton tees.
Why do you put the white in the bottom? All you need is the clear htv ront and the sublimation image on top. Your putting to many vinyls on a shirt. Its going to feel like a big puffed out patch
but if you're printing on white you don't need another vinyl
This was on cotton. This hack is good for subbing on dark colored fabrics or on fabrics that are not polyester.
@@LeslieIrene he was saying that you didn’t need the first white layer of HTV that you placed because the fabric was already white. White base layer goes first on dark fabrics.
That's nothing more than printed HTV. Sublimation on shirts does NOT feel like that crappy HTV!