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Printers Jack Iron-On Heat Transfer Paper is a premium quality product designed for white and light fabrics. Each pack contains 20 sheets measuring 8.3x11.7 inches, perfect for use with any inkjet printer. The durable and stretchable material ensures vibrant, long-lasting prints on various fabric types, making it ideal for personal projects or unique gift creations.
Manufacturer | Printers Jack |
Brand | Printers Jack |
Item Weight | 11.7 ounces |
Package Dimensions | 12.44 x 9.37 x 0.55 inches |
Item model number | B08N6CBWM6 |
Color | For Light Fabric |
Material Type | Paper |
Size | 20 Sheets |
Paper Finish | Smooth |
Manufacturer Part Number | Heat Transfer Paper for Light Fabric |
S**E
Easy to use
This worked great. My 12 year old granddaughter was able to iron this on her hoodie. Turned out so good and she was able to figure it out and print them without any help. The paper was thick enough. Was able to print without any problems.
M**S
Recommend
Recommend
N**I
As expected
Great
D**N
Horrible instructions. HORRIBLE. Here’s how you do it…
Ok the instruction were absolutely terrible. Zero support on the website contrary to what the instruction sheets say. So it mentions what side to print on in different ways depending on what production lot the paper was from. There are no marking on the back side on most of the newer lots. You print on the glossy side. Set your printer to a gloss paper and on normal or better quality. Draft is a no-no and best is a waste of ink. It’s difficult to adjust some printers to the actual paper size. It’s not really letter size it’s a little longer and more narrow. It will print on letter but will likely be offset. If you want to save yourself a headache put your design on a Word document and fiddle with it there. As long as you leave about an inch on each side minimum you’ll be fine but you may have to do some cutting. The paper sometimes separates too easy depending on your printer and the paper settings. Sometimes the paper you get may have a manufacturing issue prone to separate easier. It’s usually where the paper enters the printer and it’s most of the times it’s minimal. If you leave at least 2 inches between the end of the sheet and your design you can trim off the area that began to separate. When cutting, rounded edges work better than straight ones. They seem to peel easier and appear to be more durable. Watch for jagged edges when you’re cutting and ALWAYS leave at least a half inch or better around your final product. It mentions it in the instructions but in a not understandable way. Some folks peel the backing off and then iron but the transfer paper is fragile and more prone to getting hung up on the material when ironing. I always keep the backing on and use oversized parchment paper so that it hangs an inch or 2 over the sides of the design. The paper parchment paper it comes with the kit is like toilet paper use your own parchment paper if you have any. Use slow motions light pressure at first and start putting some good weight behind your iron. Don’t forget to concentrate a pass or 2 on the outline of your transfer and watch that the tip of your iron doesn’t get hung up on the fabric. A little over 2 minutes on high usually does the trick. Do not use an ironing board work it on a smooth wood floor or wood table. Do not iron on glass, ceramic, or anything that may conduct heat away from your material. Finally let the shirt or whatever cool somewhat before peeling. Not piping hot and not too cold. Cool. Peel slow and methodically. If you peel too fast you’ll see the end transfer to the backing and you may get uneven color transfer on your material. End product will probably survive between 1 and 4 washes. Wash gentle inside out and NO dryer. Don’t wash for at least 24 hours I’d say 48 hours. Oh yeah the white transfer requires you to create a mirror image of the photo and text. Some transfers do not. Most do however. Make sure to read the instructions. When you place the transfer on your material printed size down the final product should be oriented correctly. If it’s not you either placed it on the shirt the wrong way or you didn’t mirror the image. If your printer doesn’t have a “mirror” setting you have to do it manually on your photo software or on Word.Final product is decent. Looks way better than Avery at a fraction of the price. The Avery lasts a little longer I think however. This would be 5 stars if they had better instructions or support on their website. They only seem to have support for their dye sublimation transfers not for inkjet.
S**S
Great product, no bleeding, cracking or peeling
This is definitely my preferred printable iron on. It's soft, stretchy, adheres great, colors are brilliant on the "for dark fabrics" line and they last very well through multiple washings. I have one shirt I made myself over 2 years ago (pictured) that still looks new. No fading, bleeding, cracking or peeling. I've tried other name brands and ended up trashing them, none are better than Printers Jack. I machine wash on warm and hang to dry.
J**
The instructions were worthless, product quality was not great
I used this product on a new pink t-shirt.The instructions on the Amazon description are completely different than the instructions on the actual package. I followed the instructions on the package very carefully, and the transfer quality was terrible. About 30% of the image wouldn't transfer at all, and the rest of it was spotty and unusable. I ruined a t-shirt and two pieces of the paper trying to make it work. Also, there are no markings at all on either side of the paper, so there is no way to identify which side is the correct one to print on. I made a lucky guess.I tried it again using the instructions on the website rather than the package, but that turned out even worse, with only bits of the image transferring.I tried it a third time using a combination of both sets of instructions, along with tips from another reviewer (thank you, Dr. Manhattan!), and that was somewhat successful, but still tricky, and the image feels a little rough. (Definitely let it cool before peeling the parchment off!) I will use this because I am in a time crunch and don't have time to experiment with anything different, so hopefully the eight shirts I have to make will be passable. But I don't expect them to last through a washing because they just don't seem to be stuck on that well, and I don't know how to fix that using this product. I would never buy this product again nor recommend it.
E**R
Designs look great on the shirts!
Easy to use. Look good.
J**N
Its ok for limmited uses
first off the stuff runs pretty good through an epson printer even a front loading tray fed one,registration marks printed ok for my cutter with the paper as well but thats about the end of the positives for me,it took me 5 sheets before i could get one to run through my cutter without it bunching up and jamming trying to cut some lettering so stick to very basic outline cuts with this stuff its very thin. honestly i would suggest just skipping the use of a cutting machine with it.the stuff is very soft and stretchy, again basic cuts will help thin areas of the material WILL stretch.it can be hard to position on a shirt if its not all one piece if your using a heat press as its not tacky and the change of air pressure when you start to clamp will make the pieces move might want to tape down the cover sheet for it.and finally this makes a delicate product that you cant just wash and dry with your other clothing you have to turn it inside out to wash and air dry it or hang it out to dry.personally im just going to stick to sublimation i wanted to try this as people like cotton shirts better then polyester but there are some pretty good blends out there but if you want 100% cotton i would just stick to single color HTV vinyl or get into silk screening.
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