Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Hey gang! I have a client that wants some dri-fit style polos, with a multi-color image left chest. The client says that image feels "impregnated" into the garment, which, on a poly tee, leads me to believe that this has been dye-subbed. First question is, where can I source a dye-sub transfer? Fortunately, at least in this case, the client wants white polos, so I should be able to just press on with a standard heatpress, no? (I have a 16x20 GeoKnight).Secondly, The sample I saw was a red shirt....is this a case where the WHOLE shirt started as white, and the ENTIRE garment was pressed in red, except where the logo is done? Is that how they do these things?...thanks!!
You will have to make sure you raise you shirt up from the rubber so the edges of the paper are not touching the garment. If they do, you will have the paper lines permanently in the material.Also, if the shirt was red, yes, that was probably cut-sew sublimation job.