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ManufacturingMay 25, 2026

Embroidery vs Screen Print vs DTF — Choosing the Right Decoration Method

Each decoration method has a different cost, look, and durability. This guide helps you choose the right one for your design, garment, and budget.

Embroidery vs Screen Print vs DTF — Choosing the Right Decoration Method

Your garment design can be perfect — the right silhouette, the right fabric, the right fit. But if the decoration method doesn't match the design and fabric, the result can look cheap regardless of garment quality. Choosing between embroidery, screen printing, and DTF (direct-to-film) is one of the most consequential decisions in production. Here's a complete breakdown.

Embroidery

Embroidery stitches your design directly into the fabric using coloured threads and a computerised embroidery machine. Your artwork is first digitised — converted into a stitch file — then stitched onto the garment with precision.

Best for:

  • Brand logos and wordmarks on chest, sleeve, or back neck
  • Cap and hat branding
  • Premium and luxury streetwear
  • Any brand wanting a tactile, three-dimensional quality signal

Pros:

  • Extremely durable — doesn't crack, fade, or peel over time
  • Signals quality and premium positioning immediately
  • Works beautifully on thick fabrics: hoodies, jackets, fleece
  • Precise colour matching via thread codes

Cons:

  • Not suitable for fine detail, gradients, or photographic imagery
  • Higher cost per placement than print methods
  • Can feel stiff or heavy on lightweight fabrics
  • Digitisation setup fee required per design (typically £20–£50)

Typical cost: £1.50–£5.00 per placement
Minimum quantity: Usually 12–50 pieces per design/colourway

Screen Printing

Screen printing pushes ink through a mesh screen (stencil) directly onto the fabric. Each colour in your design requires a separate screen, making it best suited to bold designs with 1–5 solid colours.

Best for:

  • Bold graphic designs on t-shirts, hoodies, and sweatshirts
  • Oversized back prints and large placements
  • High-volume production where cost-per-unit matters
  • Designs with solid, flat colours and clear edges

Pros:

  • Excellent colour vibrancy, especially on darker fabrics
  • Very cost-effective at higher volumes (100+ pieces)
  • Durable and long-lasting when applied correctly
  • Specialty finishes available: puff, discharge, foil, glitter

Cons:

  • Higher setup cost — screen charges per colour
  • Not cost-effective for small runs
  • Can't reproduce photographic or gradient-heavy artwork
  • Each additional colour adds setup cost

Typical cost: £1.00–£4.00 per piece at 100+ units
Minimum quantity: Usually 24–50 pieces per colourway
Setup cost: £15–£40 per screen/colour

DTF (Direct-to-Film)

DTF printing works by printing your design onto a special transfer film, applying a heat-activated adhesive powder, then heat-pressing it onto the garment. Unlike older DTG (direct-to-garment) technology, DTF works on virtually any fabric type and colour without pre-treatment.

Best for:

  • Complex, multi-colour, or photographic designs
  • Small to medium production runs where screen setup costs don't make sense
  • Full-colour artwork without per-colour charges
  • Fast turnaround and flexible quantities

Pros:

  • No minimum order — works for 1 piece or 1,000
  • Reproduces full colour including gradients and photography
  • No screen setup fees
  • Works on cotton, polyester, nylon, and blends
  • Fast turnaround compared to screen printing

Cons:

  • Slight texture / hand feel on the garment surface
  • Less durable than screen print or embroidery over extended washing
  • Can crack if the garment isn't cared for correctly
  • Per-piece cost doesn't reduce as sharply at high volumes

Typical cost: £1.50–£4.00 per piece regardless of colour count
Minimum quantity: None

Full Comparison Table

Factor Embroidery Screen Print DTF
Best for Logos, chest branding Bold graphics, large prints Complex / full-colour art
Detail level Medium Medium High (photographic)
Durability ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐⭐⭐
Cost at low MOQ Medium Higher (setup fees) Low (no setup)
Cost at high volume Medium Low ✓ Medium
Premium perception ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ⭐⭐⭐
Minimum quantity 12–50 24–50 None
Works on dark fabrics Yes Yes Yes

Many Brands Combine Methods

The strongest garments often use two decoration methods together. The most common combinations in premium streetwear:

  • Embroidered chest logo + DTF back print — premium front branding paired with detailed back artwork. The most popular combination in modern streetwear.
  • Embroidered chest logo + screen-printed sleeve graphic — cost-effective combination for team and sports garments.
  • DTF front design + embroidered back neck label — subtle back branding that signals quality without competing with the front design.

How to Choose

Start with your artwork. Clean logo or wordmark? Embroidery. Bold, flat graphic? Screen print. Complex, detailed, or photographic? DTF.

Then factor in your volume. Screen printing is most cost-effective at 100+ pieces. DTF is the best option for small runs or one-offs. Embroidery pricing is relatively consistent across quantities.

When uncertain, ask your manufacturer for a cost comparison across all three methods for your specific artwork. The difference can be significant — and the best method depends on your design, your fabric, and your budget.

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