It's less ideal if you're doing thousands of identical pieces where a direct screen print contract with volume pricing would be cheaper per unit. DTF shines in variety and short runs; it doesn't always win on cost for 500-piece single-design orders.
Sports leagues and team gear — Youth sports in particular. Names and numbers, small quantities per design, deadline pressure. DTF transfers for t-shirts and jerseys handle this well because every name can be a separate file on the same gang sheet.
For a screen printing shop offloading short runs — say, a 12-piece order for a church group or a 24-piece run for a local sports league — individual transfers at volume make the math work without firing up screens. For a decorator juggling 10 different client designs in a week, DTF gang sheets in Tampa through EazyDTF let you nest those designs on a single sheet, pay for ink coverage rather than dead space, and press everything in one organized session.
If you're running a custom apparel operation — even a small one — you've probably used both methods at some point, or you're deciding which direction to go. Screen print transfers and DTF transfers aren't competing for the same job in every situation. They each have a place, and knowing where that line falls will save you money, time, and a few headaches.
Gang Sheets: Getting Your Per-Print Cost Down If you're ordering DTF gang sheets in Tampa for the first time, the concept is simple: instead of ordering individual transfers at individual prices, you fill a sheet — typically 22 inches wide by whatever length you need — with as many designs as will fit. You pay for the sheet, not per graphic. The more efficiently you pack it, the lower your effective per-transfer cost.
DTF heat transfers bond to a wide range of materials: cotton, polyester, blends, nylon, leather, denim. The adhesive powder is what makes this possible — it melts into the fabric fibers regardless of the material type. For decorators working with athletic wear, bags, hats, or mixed-fabric items, that flexibility matters.
EazyDTF produces direct to film transfers for decorators, small business owners, event organizers, and anyone else who needs ready-to-press prints without the overhead of running their own DTF printer. Orders ship fast, there are no minimums, and the pricing is built around people doing real volume work — not hobbyists paying retail markup on every piece.
EazyDTF's no-minimum structure means you order what you need. For a shop managing cash flow carefully, that's a real operational difference. You're not tying up inventory budget in transfers sitting in a drawer waiting for the right job.
EazyDTF's gang sheet builder lets you arrange designs yourself before submitting — you control the layout, the spacing, and what goes where. That matters because wasted film space is wasted money, and a tool that shows you exactly what you're ordering before you pay for it removes a lot of guesswork.
Ready to press transfers from EazyDTF require a heat press — not a household iron, not a Cricut EasyPress on low heat. The standard press parameters are typically 300–325°F, medium pressure, for 10–15 seconds, followed by a hot or cold peel depending on the specific transfer.
EazyDTF services includes pressing instructions with orders, but if you're new to pressing DTF transfers for t-shirts, do a test press on scrap material first. An over-pressed transfer can lose detail or develop a glossy finish that wasn't in the original design.
The common thread is that these customers have a heat press (or access to one) and a customer to deliver to. The transfer itself is the missing piece, and ordering it from a reliable source is faster and cheaper than producing it in-house at low volume.
Wash durability is one of the questions customers ask most. A properly pressed DTF transfer on a quality garment holds up through repeated washing without significant cracking or peeling. The adhesive layer is the key — if the transfer didn't fully bond during pressing, edges will lift after the first wash.