Every shoe bag order eventually reaches the same moment: the artwork file is open, someone asks “how should we actually print the logo,” and suddenly everyone in the room has an opinion. Silkscreen is cheap but the gradient will not come out. Heat transfer shows every crease. Embroidery looks premium but eats the budget on large logos. Sublimation only works on polyester. DTF is new and the procurement team has never heard of it. This guide cuts through the noise and tells you, print method by print method, which one belongs on your custom shoe bags with logo — based on your fabric, your artwork, your run size, and your deadline.
Quick answer: For 90% of Singapore shoe bag orders on 210D or 300D polyester, silkscreen is the right call — lowest cost at MOQ of 300 pcs, excellent adhesion on woven synthetic, clean crisp edges for logo work. Switch to sublimation if you have full-color artwork; switch to embroidery if you are on canvas or need a premium finish; switch to DTF if you have a tiny run or very detailed artwork. The rest of this article explains the edge cases.
1. Silkscreen printing — the default, and usually the right one
Silkscreen (also called screen printing) pushes ink through a fine mesh stencil directly onto the fabric. One stencil per color. It is the oldest, cheapest, and most production-friendly decoration method for shoe bags in Singapore, and it is what we specify unless there is a specific reason not to.
Why it dominates shoe bag orders: silkscreen ink soaks into polyester and nylon fibers, dries hard, and survives machine washing almost indefinitely. The cost structure is also unbeatable at scale — once the stencil is cut, the per-unit print cost is effectively pennies, which is why a 1,000-piece silkscreen run is only a small increment over a 500-piece run. On the 300-pc Aquaholic MOQ tier, silkscreen is the method that hits the lowest final unit price for a one- or two-color logo.
Where it falls apart: each ink color needs its own screen. A 4-color logo means 4 screens and 4 passes, which multiplies setup fees. Gradients, photographic images, and fine shading do not reproduce well — silkscreen is a solid-color method, not a halftone method. If your logo has more than 3 distinct colors, budget for either a re-draw into spot colors or switch print methods.
Best fabric pairings: 210D and 300D polyester, nylon 210D ripstop, canvas (10–14 oz). Do not silkscreen on non-woven below 80 gsm — the ink bleeds.
2. Heat transfer — the flexible middle ground
Heat transfer prints the logo onto a carrier film, then a heat press bonds the film to the fabric. There are two flavors worth knowing about: PU heat transfer (solid color vinyl) and digital heat transfer (full-color print on transfer paper). Each covers a different gap that silkscreen leaves open.
2.1 PU heat transfer vinyl
A plotter cuts your logo out of a sheet of colored polyurethane vinyl, weeds the negative space, and a heat press fuses the resulting shape onto the bag. It produces a very clean, slightly raised logo with a matte or gloss finish and extremely sharp edges. The vinyl is thin enough not to feel like a patch. PU vinyl is the best choice when you want a single-color logo on a zippered shoe pouch and the seams around the zip make silkscreen placement awkward.
2.2 Digital (printed) heat transfer
A digital printer prints your full-color artwork onto a coated transfer paper, and the heat press fuses it to the bag. This is the method to use when silkscreen cannot do your logo (too many colors, gradients, photographic imagery) AND your fabric is not polyester-suitable for sublimation. Digital heat transfer works on canvas, cotton, polyester blends, and most nylons.
Heat transfer trade-offs: the decorated area has a slight “film on fabric” feel, so the bag does not breathe through the print zone. On cheaper transfers, the print will crack after 15–20 hot wash cycles. Stick to premium transfer films for corporate gifts, not the bulk commodity films used on promotional giveaways.
3. Sublimation — the right answer for full-color polyester
Dye sublimation is a chemical process, not a surface-print process. The artwork is printed onto sublimation paper, then heat-pressed against the polyester fabric. Under heat and pressure the ink turns from solid to gas and bonds directly into the polyester fibers. The result is a print that is indistinguishable from the base fabric — it does not crack, peel, or fade, because it literally is the fabric.
Why sublimation is unmatched for full-color artwork: because the ink becomes part of the fabric, gradients, photographic images, all-over prints, and complex color work all reproduce perfectly. If your logo is a four-color gradient or the brand wants the entire bag face to carry a full-bleed pattern, sublimation is the only route that delivers the visual result.
The hard limitation: sublimation only works on 100% polyester (and a few poly-blend fabrics). It does not work on cotton, canvas, or nylon. It also requires white or very light-colored base fabric, because the process adds color but cannot overprint on dark fabric. If your bag needs to be navy or black, sublimation is off the table — go silkscreen or heat transfer instead.
Cost profile: per-unit cost is higher than silkscreen at low run sizes, but because there is no stencil setup and no color-count penalty, sublimation becomes cost-competitive around 500 pcs and beats silkscreen on any full-color job.
4. Embroidery — premium, tactile, durable
Embroidery stitches the logo into the fabric with colored thread. It is the most premium decoration method — nothing else reads “quality” on a branded gift the way a tight, dense embroidered logo does. For shoe bags in particular, embroidery shines on canvas bags, travel shoe organizers, and anything aimed at client appreciation gifting where perceived value matters more than print cost.
Where embroidery beats everything else: on canvas, heavy polyester, and leather-trim bags, embroidery sits into the fabric and looks expensive at a glance. It is also functionally permanent — unlike print, embroidered thread will not crack, peel, or wash off through any realistic amount of use. For hotel loyalty gifts, wedding corporate gifting, and premium sports team uniforms, embroidery is the default.
Where embroidery does not fit: large fill areas are expensive (embroidery prices by stitch count, and a solid 10 cm square logo contains tens of thousands of stitches). Fine detail below about 2 mm does not hold — tiny text and thin strokes will blur. Gradients are impossible. Sublimation and digital heat transfer will always out-perform embroidery on complex multi-color artwork.
A note on budget: embroidery setup (“digitizing” the logo file) is a one-off charge — typically S$30–80 depending on stitch count — but once digitized the file is reusable on future orders.
5. DTF — the newcomer worth knowing
DTF (Direct-to-Film) printing is a recent method that prints CMYK+white onto a PET film, dusts the print with a polymer adhesive powder, cures it, and then heat-presses it onto the bag. It behaves like digital heat transfer but with better color saturation, better wash durability, and crucially no fabric-color limitation — DTF works on dark fabrics because the white underbase is printed along with the color.
Why DTF matters for shoe bags: it is the first digital print method that does full-color photographic artwork on dark polyester, dark nylon, AND canvas without compromising durability. For a 150-piece run of branded shoe bags where the artwork is photographic and the fabric is black, DTF is the answer — silkscreen is too expensive (color count), sublimation is impossible (dark fabric), embroidery cannot do photographs, and standard heat transfer will crack.
The catch: DTF is noticeably more expensive per unit than silkscreen at the 300-pc MOQ tier. It is the right choice for short runs and complex artwork, but for a simple two-color logo on a 1,000-piece polyester order, silkscreen is still 30–40% cheaper.
6. Print method by fabric — a cheat sheet
210D / 300D polyester (most shoe bags): silkscreen first, sublimation for full-color, DTF for dark-fabric photographic work.
Nylon ripstop (sports team bags): sublimation on white/light; silkscreen or PU vinyl on dark.
Canvas (premium gifts): embroidery first, silkscreen second, digital heat transfer for complex artwork.
Non-woven (giveaways): silkscreen on 80 gsm+, avoid anything lighter.
Cordura boot bags: silkscreen or embroidery — fabric is too technical for sublimation.
7. Logo placement — where the print actually goes
Artwork placement on a shoe bag is more constrained than on a tote or backpack because the body panels are small and seams run close to the usable print area. We standardize on three placement zones:
Front centre panel — the default. 20 × 15 cm usable on a drawstring shoe bag, 18 × 10 cm on a zippered pouch. This is where 80% of logos go.
Side panel wrap — used on boot bags and travel organizers. The logo wraps across a seam, which rules out silkscreen and heat transfer in favor of sublimation (no seam penalty) or embroidery on one side only.
Drawstring tag or woven label — a second-location “maker’s mark” style decoration. Used together with a main front print to add a subtle brand touch. Adds S$0.25–0.60 per unit and makes the bag feel like a considered product rather than a giveaway.
Whichever placement you pick, make sure your artwork file is supplied as vector (AI, EPS, PDF) at 300 dpi with outlined fonts. Raster-only artwork limits you to DTF or digital heat transfer, which narrows your cost options unnecessarily.
8. Where this fits in the rest of your shoe bag order
Picking the right print method is one of three big decisions in a shoe bag order. The other two are the physical bag itself (type, fabric, size, features) and the commercial side (MOQ, pricing tiers, lead times, procurement).
If you have not locked in the bag structure yet, start with our companion explainer on the types of custom shoe bags — drawstring, zippered, boot, and travel organizer — with the fabric and size recommendations that pair naturally with each decoration method. Fabric choice actually narrows your print options before you even open the artwork file, so that conversation should come first.
If you have the bag and the print method sorted and you are now staring at procurement’s budget spreadsheet, our guide to wholesale pricing tiers breaks down how unit cost moves from 300 pcs through 500, 1,000, 2,000 and 5,000+ piece orders, and how silkscreen, sublimation, and DTF pricing curves each respond differently to volume.
And if your decoration decision is being driven by the kind of campaign you are running rather than the other way around — for example “we need a corporate wellness gift that looks premium but stays under S$6 a unit” — our inspiration guide covers branded shoe bag campaigns with the exact bag-plus-print combinations each one used.
9. Frequently asked questions
How many logo colors can I print on a shoe bag using silkscreen?
Technically up to 6, practically 1–3. Each color is a separate screen, a separate setup, and a separate print pass. At the 300-pc MOQ, a single-color silkscreen is the most cost-efficient; two colors is only marginally more expensive; three colors meaningfully raises the setup portion of your quote. Four or more colors usually means switching to sublimation (if polyester) or DTF (if dark fabric or short run).
Can I print a photo or gradient on a custom shoe bag?
Yes, but only via sublimation (white/light polyester only), digital heat transfer (any fabric), or DTF (any fabric). Silkscreen and embroidery cannot reproduce continuous-tone imagery. If your brand requires a photographic image on the bag, spec polyester and go sublimation — the result is the most durable and the best-looking of any option.
Will the print survive machine washing?
Silkscreen, embroidery, and sublimation all survive indefinite machine washing on a cold cycle with no visible degradation. Premium DTF survives 50+ washes. Heat transfer varies — premium films go 40–60 washes, commodity films crack after 15–20. Always wash the bag inside-out to protect the print zone.
How big can the logo be on a shoe bag?
On a drawstring shoe bag, typical print areas are 20 × 15 cm (front centre) and up to 25 × 18 cm if the design wraps to the edge of the front panel. On a zippered pouch, the usable area is smaller — usually 18 × 10 cm to avoid crossing the zip. On a travel organizer, side panels accept logos up to 15 × 8 cm. If your logo is larger than these figures, we will scale it rather than reject it, but tell us at quote stage.
Can I have different logos on different bags in the same order?
For silkscreen and embroidery this gets expensive because each variant needs its own setup. For sublimation, digital heat transfer, and DTF — all digital methods — variable artwork adds little to no cost per unit. If you are splitting an order across multiple team names or cohorts, pick a digital method.
Need a decoration recommendation for your artwork?
Send us your logo file and the fabric you are considering, and we will recommend the right print method within one working day. Or browse the custom shoe bag gallery to see print-method finishes on real production bags.
Hotline: (+65) 6589 8175 | Email: [email protected]







