I just tried it and it worked!! Thank you sooo much! I was pressing poly uniforms for our team and got tired and distracted and placed a sponsor logo on the wrong place... :0 but thankfully it came off sooo good. I actually pressed it once I rubbed as much as I could off. I could still see a bit but after pressing it it disappeared like magic!!
This is just a general principle and not me telling anyone how to live their lives, but rubbing in circular motions rather than linear back and forth motions is more likely to achieve a total and clean removal. Obviously its the chemical dissolution that does the grunt work in both cases, so the difference may be negligible in really stubborn prints, but if you use circular motions, you're causing the microfibre cloth to create gentle friction in multiple directions rather than just one :)
@@transfersuperstars it did work.. however I did cheat a little and the transfer I put over it I printed 1/8 inch wider to cover the outline of the old transfer.. saved the shirt
I just tried it and it worked!! Thank you sooo much! I was pressing poly uniforms for our team and got tired and distracted and placed a sponsor logo on the wrong place... :0 but thankfully it came off sooo good. I actually pressed it once I rubbed as much as I could off. I could still see a bit but after pressing it it disappeared like magic!!
Great job! Glad our video helped you out!
You are a life saver….. a shirt saver if you will 😀
hahahh good one!
Try soaking it from inside-out that way the acetone hits the adhesive side first
I'll give that a shot, had you tried removing a big solid print with that method?
This is just a general principle and not me telling anyone how to live their lives, but rubbing in circular motions rather than linear back and forth motions is more likely to achieve a total and clean removal. Obviously its the chemical dissolution that does the grunt work in both cases, so the difference may be negligible in really stubborn prints, but if you use circular motions, you're causing the microfibre cloth to create gentle friction in multiple directions rather than just one :)
Thanks for the input. We hate removing transfers and don't do them often but will try that next.
Thanks Phil! I get the bad feeling I'll be using lot of acetones 😅
Hopefully not too much! but mistakes do happen.
Thanks buddy you solve my problem of hours
No problem! Glad I could help. Keep us in mind if you need a transfer provider. www.transfersuperstars.com/products/dtf-gangsheet-builder
I’m trying this right now on a 11x16 print.. easier to douse the shirt and hit it with a scrub brush
Thats a huge print. Not sure if that will work well for such a big print. Please keep us posted.
@@transfersuperstars it did work.. however I did cheat a little and the transfer I put over it I printed 1/8 inch wider to cover the outline of the old transfer.. saved the shirt
What you did to remove dtf @@slinginlead8353
Always dropping gems😊
Thank you! Appreciate you!
Thanks for the video. Have you ever used this technique on a polyester polo shirt?
No we try not to remove dtf transfers unless its our last resort so we really don't do this often.
I tried acetone and it worked on a polyester polo
Can i do this on white shirt? Will the ink will not get stained?
Harder to do with White. White is not forgiving.
Does the acetone leave a smell on the shirt?
If you're using a lot then you may smell it. If you're just doing small lettering you might be ok
I have a shirt I bought that is starting to fall off. Would this work on it?
I can't say for certain as i'm not sure what printing method was used for your shirt.
What’s called?
link in bio
What about the smell on shirt
What about all that glue left over
if its a small area, the glue is removed with acetone. If the print is big, you'll have a difficult time removing it