Imagine unpacking a brand new box of custom hoodies for your business. You are excited to see your logo on them. But when you pull one out, the print is blurry, or the embroidery is thick, messy, and pulling the fabric.

It is a terrible feeling. Most of the time, people blame the printing press or the embroidery machine. But the truth is, the machine only does what the file tells it to do. In almost every case, bad custom apparel starts with bad artwork.

Whether you are a local Canadian business ordering staff uniforms or a print shop managing client files, getting the artwork right is the most important step. Here are the three most common artwork mistakes that ruin custom clothing, and exactly how you can fix them.

Mistake 1: Using Low Resolution Images for Printing

We see this happen all the time. A client saves a small logo from their website or takes a screenshot on their phone and sends it to the printer. These files are usually JPEG or PNG formats, which are made of tiny colored squares called pixels.

When a print shop tries to enlarge that small image to fit across the chest of a t-shirt, those tiny squares stretch out. The result is a logo with jagged, blurry edges that looks cheap and unprofessional.

The Fix: Professional Vector Art

To get a crisp and clean print, your logo needs to be converted into vector art. Instead of pixels, vector files use mathematical lines and curves. This means you can stretch the logo to the size of a billboard, and it will stay perfectly sharp. If your artwork is blurry, sending it to a team that specializes in vector art conversion is the only way to save the print.

Mistake 2: Relying on Auto Digitizing for Embroidery

Embroidery is very different from printing. You cannot just upload an image into a machine and press go. The image must be translated into a stitch file, a process called digitizing.

Many beginners try to save time by using free auto digitizing software. This is a huge mistake. A computer program does not understand the difference between stitching on a thin summer t-shirt versus a heavy Canadian winter jacket. Auto digitized files often have too many stitches in one area, which causes the thread to bunch up, break needles, or pucker the fabric.

The Fix: Custom Embroidery Digitizing

A real human needs to map out the path of the needle. Expert embroidery digitizing ensures the right underlay stitches are used and the stitch density matches the specific fabric. This gives you a clean, flat, and professional logo that will last for years.

Mistake 3: Ignoring Proper Colour Separation

If you are getting shirts made using screen printing, the printer has to create a separate physical screen for every single color in your design.

If you send them a standard full color image, the printing press does not know how to separate those colors. If the shop tries to print it as is, the colors will mix together on the shirt. The design will look muddy, and the ink will feel heavy and uncomfortable on your chest.

The Fix: Accurate Colour Separation

Before the design goes to the press, it needs proper colour separation. This process breaks the design down into its individual colors (like spot colors or CMYK) so the printer can create the right physical screens. Good colour separation makes the final print bright, accurate, and soft to the touch.

Great Apparel Starts With Great Files

You invest a lot of money into custom clothing. Do not let bad artwork waste your budget and ruin your final product.

Whether you need to fix a blurry logo with fresh vector art, prepare a complex design with custom embroidery digitizing, or get your files press ready with precise colour separation, you need a team you can trust.

At Dream Embroidery, we make sure your files are perfect before they ever reach the machine.

Don’t be a stranger, let’s do something amazing together. Send us your design today, and let our experts prepare it flawlessly for your next big project.

 

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q1: What file format is best for custom apparel printing?

Vector formats such as AI (Adobe Illustrator), EPS, or SVG are the best choice for custom apparel printing. Unlike JPEG or PNG files, vector files are resolution-independent, meaning your design stays sharp and crisp no matter how large or small it is printed. If you only have a raster image (JPEG or PNG), a professional vector conversion service can recreate your artwork in a scalable format.

Q2: What is the minimum resolution required for a print-ready logo?

For raster images, a minimum of 300 DPI (dots per inch) at the final print size is required. A logo that looks fine on your website at 72 DPI will appear blurry and pixelated when enlarged for a shirt. However, the safest solution is always to use a vector file, which has no resolution limitations at all.

Q3: What is embroidery digitizing, and why does it matter?

Embroidery digitizing is the process of converting your artwork into a stitch file that an embroidery machine can read. A skilled digitizer manually maps out the stitch path, stitch type, stitch density, and underlay to suit the specific garment fabric. Poor or auto-generated digitizing can cause thread bunching, needle breakage, and fabric puckering, all of which ruin the final product.

Q4: How many colors can I use in a screen-printed design?

Each color in a screen print requires a separate physical screen, so fewer colors generally means lower cost and faster production. Most designs use between 1 and 6 colors. If your design has gradients or photographic detail, other printing methods such as direct-to-garment (DTG) printing may be a better fit. Your print shop can advise on the most cost-effective approach.

Q5: Can I fix a low-resolution logo myself?

Simply increasing the image size in photo editing software does not improve quality. It only stretches the existing pixels, making the blurriness worse. The only real fix is to have the logo manually redrawn as a vector file by a professional artwork conversion service. This recreates the design from scratch using clean mathematical lines and curves.

Q6: How long does it take to get artwork prepared for printing or embroidery?

Turnaround time depends on the complexity of the design. Simple vector conversions or digitizing jobs can often be completed within 24 to 48 hours. More complex multi-color designs or detailed embroidery files may take longer. It is always a good idea to submit your artwork as early as possible to avoid delays in your production schedule.

Q7: What is colour separation, and do I need it for every print job?

Colour separation is required specifically for screen printing. It is the process of breaking a multi-color design into individual layers, one for each ink color, so that separate screens can be created for the press. If you are using digital printing methods such as DTG, colour separation is handled automatically by the printer software. When in doubt, ask your print shop which method they use.

Q8: Can Dream Embroidery handle artwork for both printing and embroidery?

Yes. Dream Embroidery provides a full range of artwork preparation services, including vector art conversion, custom embroidery digitizing, and colour separation for screen printing. Whether you are ordering embroidered uniforms, screen-printed t-shirts, or promotional merchandise, their team can prepare your files to meet the exact requirements of your decoration method.

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