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Design Tips

Custom T-Shirt Design Tips: From Artwork to Print-Ready File

9 min read

Nothing is more frustrating than uploading your design and getting back a blurry, pixelated print. Whether you're ordering a dozen shirts for a school club or 500 for a company event, the quality of your final garment starts with the quality of your artwork file. Here's everything you need to know before you hit upload.

1. Choosing the Right Artwork Format: Vector vs. Raster

The single most important decision you'll make is your file format. Artwork files fall into two categories:

Rule of thumb:If you have access to a vector version of your logo or design, always use it. If you only have a raster image, make sure it's at least 300 DPI at the actual dimensions it will be printed. A 200×200-pixel image that looks fine on a screen will be roughly the size of a postage stamp when printed at the correct resolution.

Pro tip

Open your image in an image editor and check Image → Image Size. If the resolution reads 72 DPI and the document size is tiny, your file is not print-ready. Ask your designer for a high-res export at 300 DPI.

2. Color Limits for Screen Printing

Screen printing uses physical ink layers — one screen per color. Every color in your design adds cost and complexity.

When designing for screen printing, use solid Pantone (PMS) color references rather than RGB or CMYK values — printers mix inks to specific PMS numbers for consistent, predictable results across large runs.

3. Placement Guidelines: Chest, Back, and Sleeve

Where your art lands on the shirt matters as much as the art itself. Standard placement zones:

When in doubt, request a digital mockup before approving your order. SpreeShop generates mockups automatically when you upload artwork so you can see exactly how it will look.

4. Font Legibility at Small Sizes

Text is where a lot of custom apparel goes wrong. A font that looks sleek on screen can become completely unreadable when printed at small sizes on a shirt.

5. Working with School or Team Brand Colors

Schools and athletic programs often have official brand standards including specific Pantone colors. Getting these right is important — a slightly-off navy or maroon can look unprofessional and draw complaints from administrators and boosters.

6. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Ready to Print Your Design?

Upload your artwork to SpreeShop and get an instant mockup. No minimums, no setup fees — just great-looking custom apparel for your school, team, or organization.

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Quick Reference Checklist Before You Submit

Getting these fundamentals right means your first print is your best print — and you won't have to re-order because a blurry logo ended up on 200 shirts. When you're ready, SpreeShop's upload flow walks you through each step and shows you a live mockup before you ever commit to a quantity.