A high-quality print starts with a high-quality file. Before uploading your design to Printful, check the file format, resolution, color profile, transparency, and product-specific file guidelines. This helps reduce unexpected white backgrounds, blurry prints, color shifts, and design placement issues. For visual examples, design tips, and links to more detailed guides for different print techniques, you should also review the Graphics and embroidery guide.
Use the recommended file type
For most print products, use PNG or JPEG/JPG, depending on the product and printing method. For DTG products, PNG is usually the best option because it supports transparent backgrounds. JPEG files don’t support transparency, so designs with transparent backgrounds may appear with a visible white background after upload.
Use PNG when your design needs:
- a transparent background
- sharp text, logos, or illustrations
- clean edges around the artwork
- DTG printing on apparel
Use JPEG when your design is:
- a full-coverage photo or artwork (all-over print, posters, canvas, etc.)
- intended for large print areas where file size matters
- used for products or techniques where the product guidelines recommend JPEG
Use the sRGB IEC61966-2.1 color profile
Create and export your print file in the sRGB IEC61966-2.1 color profile. This is the color profile Printful recommends for uploaded print files. Our printing system is optimized for sRGB files and converts colors for the printing process.
Colors on a screen won’t always match the final printed product exactly. Screens emit light, while printed products reflect light from ink on fabric, paper, or another material. Bright neon colors, very saturated RGB colors, and some deep tones may print less vividly than they appear on your monitor.
For more details, see: Should I use RGB or CMYK for Printful print files?
Check the dimensions and requirements
Each product and print area has its own print area dimensions and DPI requirements. Before creating your design, always check the product’s File guidelines as they contain product-specific requirements and tips.
Resolution refers to the number of pixels in an image, while DPI describes how many dots of ink are printed within one inch. Both matter: a file can have a high pixel count but still print poorly if it’s stretched across a print area that’s too large. To learn more about how DPI, resolution, and actual print size work together, read: What is DPI, resolution, and actual print file size?
As a general rule:
- Use high-resolution artwork from the start.
- Use files that are 150–300 DPI, depending on the product requirements.
- Make sure the file is sized to match the actual print dimensions to ensure DPI is calculated correctly.
- Don’t enlarge a small, low-resolution image and expect it to print sharply.
- Check any print quality warnings before saving or submitting your product.
The recommended DPI depends on the product and printing technique. Most apparel and large-format products require at least 150 DPI, while paper prints, smaller products, or products with fine detail may require 300 DPI for the best results. For more guidance, see Is there a difference in quality between 150 and 300 DPI?
In the File guidelines section of the product page, you can also download design templates that include the correct dimensions, print area, and safe zones for the product. Using these templates helps you position your artwork correctly, create designs in the right resolution, and avoid important design elements being placed too close to the edges. You can open the template in your design program, add or create your artwork, remove the guide layers, and export it for uploading.
Check the maximum file size
Design files added to your File library can be up to 200 MB, with maximum dimensions of 20,000 × 20,000 px. If your file is larger than this, resize it, simplify the design, or compress it with a tool that preserves image quality. If you try to upload a file that doesn’t meet these requirements, a warning or error message will appear and the upload will fail.
Check transparency before uploading
If your design should have no background, make sure the background is actually transparent before uploading. In most design programs, transparent areas appear as a gray-and-white checkerboard.
Before exporting:
- Remove any unwanted background layer.
- Zoom in around the design edges to check for leftover pixels.
- Avoid semi-transparent edges or fades for DTG/DTF printing.
- Export as PNG to preserve transparency.
Semi-transparent effects like shadows, fades, smoke, glow effects, and low-opacity textures may not print the way they appear on screen, especially with DTG/DTF printing on colored or dark garments. You can simulate a semi-transparent effect with half-toning, see how in our video tutorial.
Avoid design elements that don’t print well
Some designs look good digitally but don’t translate well to physical products. Before uploading, check for:
-
Very small text or thin lines
Small details can become hard to read, especially on textured fabric or smaller products. Use clear fonts, enough spacing, and strong contrast.- With DTG printing, small text or details can appear blurry, lose sharpness, or fade into the fabric texture.
- With DTF printing, very thin elements may not adhere properly to the fabric, which can increase the risk of peeling or cracking over time.
-
Light designs on light products
White or pale designs may be hard to see on white, cream, pastel, or heather garments. Add contrast or choose a darker product color. -
Dark designs on dark products
Black or very dark artwork on a black or dark garment may look dull or low-contrast. On some dark garments, a white underbase may be used to help colors stand out, and this can subtly affect the final look. -
Neon and highly saturated colors
Very bright RGB colors may be outside the printable color range. They can print duller, darker, or less saturated than they appear on screen. Use soft proofing to check for out of gamut colors.