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Vinyl vs Screen Printing

With all the talk about our new vinyl graphic capabilities and the great features they offer, I think this would be a good time to take a deeper look into the differences between vinyl and screen printing when making a t-shirt. Both options will give you a high quality, long lasting product, and in most cases either option will work just as well as the other.

Run sizes

VINYL: Vinyl is well suited for very small runs (which we would consider anything from 1 to 12 shirts), this is because the set up time is much quicker than that of screen printing. This doesn’t make it a faster overall method though, as every shirt still requires individual set up, which becomes too time consuming beyond the 12 shirt mark.

SCREEN PRINTING: Our minimum order quantity (sometimes referred to as MOQ) for screen printing is 24 shirts, as it takes much longer to setup than vinyl. Once the setup is finished though, nothing will need to change from shirt to shirt (as long as the design stays the same), making it much quicker to print larger orders.

Vinyl vs Screen Printing Run Size
Vinyl is best suited for small runs (under 24), screen printing is more cost-effective for large runs.

Image detail and colour(s)

VINYL: Simple graphics work best with vinyl, think text based pieces, or basic shapes. Need numbers for your hockey team’s jerseys? Perfect! Want a photograph of gram-grams 101st birthday? We can promise you it just won’t turn out. There isn’t a way for us to create true gradients (think shading, or blending of colours) with vinyl and any fine details will get lost.

SCREEN PRINTING: Screen printing allows for a much higher level of detail, printing photographs is possible as intricate design features will come through beautifully. You also have access to a full gamut of colours, as we can mix any shade you might like.

Vinyl vs Screen Printing Detail and Colour
Simple graphics work best with vinyl, while screen printing allows for a much higher level of detail.

Lifespan

Vinyl vs Screen Printing Lifespan
Both vinyl heat transfers and screen printed ink should last years under normal use.

VINYL: Vinyl heat transfers applied to t-shrits should last years under normal use. Here are the care instructions from the manufacturer (Siser North America):

  • Do not dry clean
  • Machine wash WARM w/mild detergent
  • Dry at normal setting
  • No chlorine bleach
  • Wait 24 hours before first wash

SCREEN PRINTING: Screen printed graphics should last the life of the garment under normal use.

If you have any questions about our vinyl or screen printing services, or would like to receive a FREE quote, you can email us or call the shop at (506) 642-6563.

34 thoughts on “Vinyl vs Screen Printing”

  1. That was very informative and helpful, thank you for the detailed descriptions of each process.

  2. Thank you for clarity. .I guess that you can’t go wrong with either but for larger orders screen printing is best.

  3. Great Topic, However I would have like to see the same image for both.
    Is it possible to see the screen print on the vinyl as well.
    Thanks.

  4. I recently wore a shirt with large vinyl printing on the front and it was very uncomfortable. Silkscreen printing seems to let my chest breath (sweet/heat) much better than vinyl. My two cents

  5. Thanks for the info. I am a long time screen printer who just ventured into vinyl and I love it. I don’t have to turn away small custom jobs any more! The process is also a lot of fun!! Thanks for the great article

  6. Thanks for reading our blog – so happy to hear we could help. Best of luck with your t-shirt printing business!

  7. Thanks for reading Valentin. We found the same thing – vinyl helped fill a gap in our business and we never regetted investing in the equipment. Best of luck with your business!

  8. So is this picture in this article of vinyl? I kind of understand the difference, but at the same time, I don’t.

  9. Yes vinyl graphics on the left (simple shapes, 1 colour) and screen printing on the right (complex shapes, 3 colours in this example).

  10. This is an informative post. The type is based on the customer’s needs, no matter how time consuming. The customer will pay for whatever they want, whether based on your information to them, or the research that they have done personally.

  11. Reasonable article. Only problem is that there are now a plethora of different print equipment that satisfy specific needs (DTG/Print&Cut/Dry Toner/Solvent&Dye Inks etc) used in conjunction with different substrates. Advantages can be found in all, so a person that is seriously into garment decoration could make themselves bankrupt collecting equipment to perform the various desires, giving optimum results. I am dubious about shelf-life of HTV’s – PVC’s and PU’s alike. Adhesives also. I do wish that HTV suppliers focused more on this aspect, bcos no supplier/manufacturer I know of quotes production dates, and there is no concrete way of gauging which of HTV or adhesive will fail first – very annoying if trying to make bespoke/high quality garments that one can be confident will last at least five years. My opinion.

  12. Great Post, it seems in 2019 , DTG is starting to take over vinyl. At least, vinyl is relevant towards polyester shirts. Vinyl can do special colors (gold/silver..) while DTG can’t, i guess it has it uses.Thanks for sharing

    Jason, https://www.yoprint.com

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Minimum order quantity: 25 pieces for screen printing / 25 pieces for embroidery.

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