Do Custom DTF Transfers Work on Cotton and Polyester?
Short answer: yes, and that's exactly why so many teams love this printing method. Custom DTF transfers aren't picky about fabric the way some older printing techniques are. Cotton, polyester, blends, even trickier materials, all take the transfer well, which makes DTF one of the most versatile options out there for custom apparel.
Here's why it works so smoothly. The design gets printed onto film, coated with adhesive, then heat-pressed directly onto the garment. Since the bond happens through heat and pressure rather than depending on the fabric's fiber type, DTF adapts to whatever material you're working with. That's a big advantage over sublimation, which really only performs at its best on polyester.
At Genre Sports, a Las Vegas-based USA uniform factory, this flexibility gets put to good use daily. As a factory direct operation, orders move straight from design to production without extra markup or delay. Every transfer really starts with top quality fabrics, so whether your team is rolling with cotton, poly-blend , or another mix sort of thing, the finished outcome will still feel durable through regular laundering and daily wear.
This flexibility also means your whole team’s gear doesn’t have to match fabric-for-fabric. Jerseys, hoodies, and bags can all share the same design, and it’s fully customizable with team name, colors, logos, and player names too, even if what’s underneath is different materials.
No minimum order means small teams and individual pieces get the same quality treatment as a full league order. And with Made in USA production, you're not waiting weeks for overseas shipping just to find out your design didn't come out right.
So yes, cotton and polyester both work great with DTF, no guesswork needed.
