Who This Service Makes Sense For If you're a screen printer in Tampa looking to offload short runs without running a screen, DTF transfer printing is the most practical way to handle those jobs without turning away customers. You press the transfers the same way you'd apply a screen print transfer, and the end result is indistinguishable to most buyers.
That's the gap DTF transfers fill, and it's why decorators across the Tampa Bay area have been shifting a growing share of their work toward this method. Not because it's trendy, but because it solves a specific production problem that other methods don't handle well.
For individual crafters and small home-based sellers doing custom apparel printing in Tampa, the no-minimum structure is what makes it work at all. You're not forced to order 50 transfers to get a reasonable price. You can order what your current job actually requires and order more later.
For businesses that are used to paying screen printing prices on short runs, the switch to DTF transfers often feels like a price drop even at full retail rates. When you factor in gang sheet pricing, it's usually a significant one.
There are no per-design fees tacked onto gang sheet orders. What you see on the sheet is what you pay for. That straightforward pricing makes it easier to quote jobs accurately — you know your transfer cost going in, which means your customer price is based on real numbers, not guesswork.
File Requirements: Where Most Problems Start Bad files are the number one reason an order doesn't look the way the customer expected. This isn't a vendor problem — it's a file problem, and it's preventable.
The other real advantage is color. Full-color artwork, gradients, fine text, photographic images — all of it prints in a single pass. If you've been limiting your designs because screen printing makes multi-color work expensive on small quantities, custom DTF transfers remove that ceiling entirely.
EazyDTF's pricing is competitive and publicly visible — you're not waiting for a quote or negotiating based on account size. Individual transfers, gang sheets, and bulk orders are all priced by print area. Small business operators can run the numbers themselves without a sales call, which is how it should work.
For shops that do primarily screen printing and have been turning away short-run requests, adding custom heat transfers as a service line is often the easiest revenue expansion available. No new equipment, no new chemistry, no additional labor beyond pressing. You're buying finished transfers and applying them. The margin on a 12-piece order priced correctly covers the transfer cost with room to spare.
Screen printers who do high-volume work on standard orders sometimes use DTF heat transfers in Tampa to handle the short runs and one-offs that aren't worth setting up screens for. It keeps those customers in house instead of turning them away. Event organizers — 5Ks, charity events, school fundraisers — often need transfers for 30 shirts across four or five designs, quantities that are awkward for traditional printing but straightforward with gang sheets. Church groups ordering seasonal shirts for a retreat or camp. Sports leagues that need roster updates mid-season and can't wait for a full production run.
The practical advice for anyone ordering for the first time: run a test order with a simple design before you commit a client job to an unfamiliar vendor. One transfer on one shirt tells you everything you need to know about press settings, color accuracy, and adhesion before you're pressing 80 pieces for a paying customer. That's not a criticism of any specific vendor — it's just how you qualify a new supplier in this business.
Direct to film transfers — DTF, for short — are full-color designs printed onto a release film with a water-based ink set, then coated with a hot-melt adhesive powder and cured. What you receive is a ready-to-press transfer that goes onto a garment with a heat press in roughly 10 to 15 seconds. Peel, press again if needed, done.
The concept isn't complicated. Instead of printing one design per sheet, you pack multiple designs — or multiple sizes of the same design — onto a single film sheet. You pay for the sheet, not per design. If you're ordering DTF gang sheets in Tampa through a service like EazyDTF, you're essentially getting the print cost of a large sheet split across however many designs you can fit onto it. For vendors juggling five different client orders at once, that's a real difference on the invoice.
EazyDTF handles the printing side — consistent quality, fast production, no minimums, ships to Tampa and everywhere else in Florida without drama. What you control is your file quality, your press application, and your deadline management. Get those right, and your customers see clean, durable prints. Get them wrong, and no vendor can save the outcome.
RGB color profiles are standard for DTF printing. Colors will shift slightly from what you see on screen — monitors emit light, printed transfers reflect it. If color accuracy is critical (a specific brand color, for example), ask about color matching options before you order, not after the transfer arrives. EazyDTF team's process produces consistent, vibrant output, but no DTF printer can compensate for a poorly prepared file.