Jacket Printing in Singapore: A Guide to Custom Outerwear
Quick Answer
Jacket printing in Singapore covers several methods: silkscreen, embroidery, heat transfer, and DTF printing. The right choice depends on your design complexity, fabric type, order quantity, and budget. Most Singapore printing companies have a minimum order of 30 to 50 pieces for custom jackets, with turnaround times ranging from 7 to 14 working days.
Introduction
A well-branded jacket does more than keep your team warm. It puts your logo in front of clients, makes your team look cohesive at events, and signals that your organisation takes its image seriously.
But getting jacket printing right in Singapore takes more planning than a standard t-shirt order. The fabric is thicker, the surfaces are varied, and the wrong print method can look cheap, crack after a few washes, or simply not adhere properly.
This guide covers everything you need to know: which print methods work on jackets, how to prepare your design, what to watch out for when placing an order, and how to get consistent results across a large team order.
Sin Ming has been handling corporate jacket customisation for Singapore businesses for years — this guide is built from real production experience, not theory.
Types of Jackets Commonly Printed in Singapore
Before choosing a print method, know what you are working with. Different jacket types have different surfaces, and not every method works on every fabric.
Windbreakers
Lightweight nylon or polyester shells. Smooth surface, ideal for silkscreen and heat transfer. Embroidery is possible on the chest but can be difficult near zips and seams. Very popular for sports clubs, school CCAs, and corporate events.
Fleece Jackets
Soft, textured surface. Embroidery works well here — it sits neatly on the pile without distorting. Silkscreen is generally not recommended because the ink does not bond cleanly to a textured surface.
Softshell Jackets
A hybrid between a fleece and a windbreaker. The outer layer is smooth enough for embroidery and heat transfer. Very popular for corporate outerwear because they look polished and can be worn in air-conditioned offices.
Coach Jackets
Lightweight, often with a snap or zip front, and a smooth polyester shell. Clean surface for silkscreen or DTF printing across the back, with chest embroidery on the front. Common for sports teams and brand merchandise.
Bomber Jackets
Ribbed cuffs, heavier construction, often polyester or satin. Can support embroidery and heat transfer well. The glossy surface of satin bombers makes silkscreen tricky — adhesion testing is important.
Print Methods for Custom Jackets
Each method has strengths. Here is a breakdown of what works best on outerwear.
1. Embroidery
Embroidery stitches your design directly into the fabric using thread. It is the most durable option for jackets — the logo will not crack, peel, or fade over time.
Best for: Chest logos, sleeve badges, collar branding. Looks premium and professional.
Works on: Fleece, softshell, windbreakers (smooth zones), coach jackets.
Limitations: Not suitable for fine detail, gradients, or very small text. Placement is limited to flat surfaces — not over seams or near zips.
Cost: Higher than silkscreen per piece, but prices drop significantly on larger orders. Most vendors price embroidery by stitch count.
Sin Ming’s embroidery services handle both simple chest logos and more complex multi-colour badge work.
2. Silkscreen Printing
Ink is pushed through a mesh stencil onto the fabric. Fast, cost-effective for large runs, and produces vivid, durable prints on smooth surfaces.
Best for: Back designs, large chest graphics on windbreakers and coach jackets.
Works on: Smooth polyester and nylon surfaces. Not suitable for textured fabrics like fleece.
Limitations: Minimum order quantities apply per colour per screen. Not suitable for photographic or gradient designs.
Cost: Very competitive on runs of 50 pieces and above. Setup fees apply per colour.
For clean, large-area prints on windbreakers, silkscreen is often the most cost-effective choice.
3. Heat Transfer / DTF Printing
Heat transfer involves printing a design onto transfer film and pressing it onto the jacket with heat and pressure. DTF (Direct-to-Film) is a newer variant that produces full-colour prints including gradients and photographic imagery.
Best for: Designs with multiple colours, complex graphics, and small batch orders where screen setup costs are prohibitive.
Works on: Polyester, nylon, cotton blends. DTF works on a wider range of fabrics than standard heat transfer.
Limitations: Less durable than embroidery on textured surfaces. Placement must avoid high-friction areas like underarm seams.
Cost: Lower setup costs, making it practical for orders under 30 pieces. Per-piece cost is higher than silkscreen for large runs.
Sin Ming handles both DTF and heat transfer printing, which is useful when a jacket design includes both embroidery (for the chest) and a printed element (for the back).
4. Sublimation Printing
Sublimation converts ink into gas that bonds permanently with polyester fibres. The result is a print that is fully embedded in the fabric — no peeling, no cracking, and no surface feel.
Best for: All-over jacket designs, full-colour graphics, sports team outerwear where every centimetre of the garment is branded.
Works on: Polyester fabrics only. Does not work on cotton.
Limitations: Not suitable for cotton blends. Works best on white or light-coloured base fabrics. Not ideal for standard corporate jackets that are already manufactured.
Cost: Best value on large runs where the entire jacket is custom-made from sublimated panels. Not economical for adding a logo to an already-manufactured jacket.
Read more about sublimation printing in Singapore if your team order involves custom-cut sportswear or all-over branding.
Placement Guide: Where to Put Your Logo on a Jacket
Placement affects how professional the finished product looks. Here are the most common options and what to expect from each.
Left Chest
The most common placement for a corporate or school logo. Embroidery is standard here. Keep the design small — 8 cm to 10 cm wide is appropriate. Any larger and it starts to look disproportionate.
Back Panel
Ideal for larger graphics, sponsor logos, or team names. Silkscreen and DTF work well across the full back panel. This is the most visible spot when someone walks away from you — excellent for event branding.
Sleeve
A secondary logo or design element on the upper sleeve. Works well for embroidery on smooth sleeves. Common for sports teams that want club branding on both sides of the sleeve.
Collar and Cuffs
Small text or stripe designs on the collar or cuffs create a distinctive detail that sets your jacket apart. Requires precision — not every vendor handles this well.
Full Front or All-Over Print
For sublimated jackets only, where panels are printed before the jacket is assembled. This gives maximum creative freedom but requires working with a vendor from the design stage.
How to Prepare Your Design File for Jacket Printing
A poorly prepared design file is the most common cause of print quality problems. Follow these guidelines before you submit your artwork.
Vector files for embroidery and silkscreen: AI or EPS files are preferred. A PNG or JPG at 300 dpi minimum is acceptable for DTF, but vector is always better for clean edges.
Colour codes: Provide Pantone codes if colour matching is critical. This applies especially to silkscreen, where ink colours are mixed to specification.
Minimum font size: Anything below 6 mm in height is likely to lose detail in embroidery. For silkscreen, text below 4 mm risks bleeding.
Stitch count for embroidery: Your vendor will convert your artwork to an embroidery stitch file. Ask to see a digital preview before production starts — this is where you catch any detail losses.
Placement mockup: Ask your vendor for a placement mockup showing where the print will sit on the jacket. This is especially important for back prints and sleeve designs.
Typical Timelines and Pricing for Jacket Printing in Singapore
Timelines and prices vary by vendor, method, and order size. Here are realistic benchmarks based on typical Singapore production runs.
Embroidery
- MOQ: 20 to 30 pieces for standard chest logos
- Lead time: 10 to 14 working days from approved artwork
- Price range: SGD 8 to SGD 20 per piece for a standard chest logo, depending on stitch count and quantity
Silkscreen on Windbreakers
- MOQ: 30 to 50 pieces per design
- Lead time: 7 to 10 working days
- Price range: SGD 3 to SGD 8 per piece for a one-colour print; add SGD 2 to SGD 4 per additional colour
DTF Printing
- MOQ: As low as 1 piece in some cases; cost-effective from 20 pieces
- Lead time: 5 to 10 working days
- Price range: SGD 5 to SGD 15 per print depending on size and complexity
Full Sublimation Jacket
- MOQ: 20 to 30 pieces
- Lead time: 14 to 21 working days (includes panel printing and garment assembly)
- Price range: SGD 30 to SGD 80 per jacket depending on design complexity and fabric
For an accurate quote for your specific order, contact the Sin Ming team.
Choosing Jacket Styles for Uniform Orders
For corporate uniform or team outerwear orders, the jacket style sets the tone as much as the print method.
Corporate and Office Contexts
Softshell and fleece jackets suit office environments. They look professional, hold embroidery cleanly, and wear well over shirts and blouses. Consider navy, charcoal, or black as base colours — these are the most versatile for colour-matching across a team.
Sin Ming’s uniforms range includes jacket styles suited for corporate and F&B sectors.
Sports and Schools
Windbreakers and coach jackets are the standard choice for CCAs, sports clubs, and school events. Lightweight construction means they are comfortable in Singapore’s climate, and the smooth surface handles silkscreen back prints and embroidered chest badges very well.
For schools and sports teams that want coordinated kits, consider pairing the jacket with matching polo t-shirts or sports jerseys for a complete team uniform.
Events and Brand Merchandise
For product launches, exhibitions, and brand activations, bomber and coach jackets with full back prints make strong merchandise items. The back panel is large enough for a bold design, and the front chest logo keeps the brand present on both sides.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Ordering Custom Jackets
These are the issues that come up most often in production, and how to avoid them.
Ordering without a size run: Corporate jacket orders often fail because the person placing the order does not collect accurate sizes from the team. Always do a size survey before confirming your order.
Using raster artwork for embroidery: A low-resolution PNG will not digitise cleanly. Provide vector files wherever possible.
Choosing embroidery for fine detail logos: A logo with thin lines, small text, or gradients will lose quality in embroidery. Consider DTF for designs with fine detail and switch to embroidery for the back.
Ignoring fabric suitability: Silkscreen on a fleece jacket almost always looks poor after the first few washes. Match your method to your fabric.
Skipping the sample approval step: For orders over 50 pieces, always request a sample or pre-production mockup before full production begins. This is standard practice and protects you from receiving a full order that does not match expectations.
Leaving too little time: Jacket printing involves more steps than standard t-shirt orders — especially if embroidery digitising is required. Build in at least 14 working days from artwork approval.
Why Choose Sin Ming for Custom Jacket Printing?
Sin Ming has handled thousands of jacket printing orders for Singapore businesses, schools, sports clubs, and government organisations. The team handles the full range — embroidery, silkscreen, DTF, sublimation — and can advise on which method suits your design and fabric before you place your order.
For corporate jackets, the focus is always on clean logo placement, accurate Pantone colour matching, and consistent output across a full size run.
All services are handled in-house, which means faster turnaround and direct quality control — not outsourced to a third-party vendor you have never met.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the minimum order for jacket printing in Singapore?
Most vendors set a minimum of 20 to 50 pieces for custom jacket orders. DTF printing can sometimes accommodate smaller orders, but embroidery and silkscreen usually require at least 30 pieces to cover setup costs.
Q: Can I print on both the front and back of a jacket?
Yes. The most common configuration is an embroidered chest logo on the front and a silkscreen or DTF print on the back. These can be combined in a single order.
Q: How long does jacket printing take in Singapore?
Typically 7 to 14 working days from artwork approval, depending on the method and order size. Sublimated jackets take longer — up to 21 working days — because panels are printed before the jacket is assembled.
Q: Can I print on a dark-coloured jacket?
Yes. Embroidery works on any colour. DTF also handles dark fabrics well because the transfer film includes a white underbase. Silkscreen on dark fabrics requires an underbase layer, which adds to the cost.
Q: Which print method is most durable on jackets?
Embroidery is the most durable. The thread is stitched into the fabric and will not crack, peel, or fade under normal washing conditions. DTF and heat transfer are durable if cared for properly — wash inside out on a gentle cycle and avoid ironing directly over the print.
Q: Can I mix embroidery and printing on the same jacket?
Yes, and this is actually very common. A clean embroidered chest logo combined with a bold printed back panel gives a premium result that uses the strengths of both methods.
Q: Is sublimation suitable for corporate jackets?
Sublimation works best for all-over designs on fully custom-made jackets. For most corporate orders where a standard-cut jacket needs a logo added, embroidery or DTF is more practical.
Q: Do I need to provide sizing for each team member?
Yes. Jacket sizing varies more than t-shirts, especially for fitted styles. Collect measurements or have team members try on samples before confirming quantities per size.
Final Thoughts
Custom jacket printing in Singapore is straightforward when you choose the right method for the right fabric, prepare your artwork correctly, and give yourself enough lead time.
Embroidery for professional chest logos. Silkscreen or DTF for bold back graphics. Sublimation for full custom sports outerwear. Mix methods for the best of all approaches on a single jacket.
If you are ready to get started, the Sin Ming team can advise on the best combination for your design and help you through the ordering process from artwork approval to delivery.
Get a quote for your custom jacket order today: sinming.com.sg/contact-us
Blog by Sin Ming, Singapore’s trusted custom printing and uniform specialist. Explore our full range of customisation services or browse ready-stock windbreakers for fast turnaround orders.
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