If you bought a t shirt press, got excited making custom tees for a while, and now it's collecting dust in the corner of your garage or craft room—you're not alone.
But here's the thing: that machine's potential goes way beyond t-shirts. Once you understand the core logic of "flat heat transfer"—if the surface is flat and heat-resistant, it can probably become your canvas—you can turn that equipment into a real money-maker.
Today, I'm walking you through 5 creative items. They're fun to make, sell well, and will finally put that idle machine back to work. And while we're at it, we'll talk about some helpful tools like dtf printer, vinyl cutter, and when they make sense for different projects.
Table of contents
Prep Work: The 3 Essentials for Universal Transfer
Before we dive in, here are three universal principles that apply no matter what you're pressing:
- Heat Test: Not sure if an item can handle the heat? Press your hand against the heated platen briefly—if you can't hold it there, the item probably can't either (especially plastics—be extra careful).
- Pressure Adjustment: Pressing a 3D object like a hat is totally different from pressing a flat item like wood. 3D items require smarter "leveraging," not just cranking the pressure knob tighter.
- Must-Have Supplies: Seriously, get yourself a roll of heat-resistant tape (the amber-colored kind). It secures your transfer paper and prevents shifting the moment pressure hits—this is the #1 reason beginners ruin projects.
5 Creative Items: Deep Dive Tutorials
🔥 1. Wooden Coasters — Create Artsy Best-Sellers
Why It Sells: Wooden coasters cost pennies wholesale but sell for $5–$10 at craft fairs. Whether it's couple's initials, pet portraits, or short inspirational quotes, wooden coasters have that built-in "aesthetic appeal."
The Challenge: Wood has natural grain and pores. If pressure is uneven or time is too short, the design will have white spots or look faded. Plus, wood contains moisture—skip pre-pressing, and you'll get bubbles.
Pro Tips:
- Preheat the coaster with your heat press for 5–8 seconds first to remove moisture.
- Set temperature around 350°F—slightly higher than for t-shirts.
- Crank up the pressure to ensure full contact between the platen and wood surface.
- Heads up: If you're using prints from a dtf printer, make sure the coating matches wood. If you're using heat transfer vinyl, cut and weed it first—this is where a vinyl cutter shines for detailed pet portraits.
Great for: wedding favors, housewarming gifts, coffee shop merch.
👜 2. Canvas Tote Bags — Eco-Friendly Fashion
Why It Sells: Canvas is thicker and tougher than t-shirts. With the plastic bag ban spreading everywhere, a well-designed tote bag is literally a walking billboard.
The Challenge: Tote bags usually have double-layer thickness and those long handles. If you press them wrong, handles get in the way, and heat can seep through, leaving marks on the front.
Pro Tips:
- Stuff a silicone pad or heat-resistant board inside the bag to prevent heat from seeping through and marking the front.
- Tuck those handles carefully outside the press area or tape them down on the back.
- Material Matters: Canvas has a fuzzy surface. If you're using sublimation paper, the bag must have high polyester content. Otherwise, stick with heat transfer vinyl or specialty transfer paper. With a vinyl cutter, you can cut bold lettering for minimalist designs.
🎨 3. Glazed Tiles / Metal Sheets — Home Decor Art
Why It Sells: Printing photos or quotes on tiles or metal sheets looks like professional art store merchandise. Family photos, anniversary gifts, graduation wishes—they feel substantial and thoughtful.
The Challenge: Super smooth surfaces demand perfection—even one fingerprint will show up after pressing. Also, regular transfer paper might not stick well.
Pro Tips:
- Clean thoroughly with alcohol and wear gloves to avoid fingerprints.
- Use specialty coated paper or metal transfer paper (depending on whether you're using a dtf printer or laser printer).
- Secure all four sides with heat-resistant tape.
- Cooling method is usually "cold peel," and wait until completely cool before moving—the ink layer is still soft when hot.
- Tool Upgrade: A Mini Heat Press is perfect for small items like this. No need to fire up the big machine every time.
🧢 4. Structured Hats — Conquering Curved Surfaces
Why It Sells: The custom hat market is huge—sports teams, corporate swag, limited drops from streetwear brands. But professional hat printing is expensive. Doing it yourself cuts costs in half.
The Challenge: This is the most technically demanding project today. Hats have curves. A standard flat heat press (the t shirt press you already own) is flat. Press down, and you'll crush the brim while missing the sides completely.
Pro Tips:
- Pro Tool: If you're serious about hats, invest in a hat press attachment or a dedicated machine. It's designed specifically for curved surfaces.
- Budget Hack: No hat press? Slide the hat onto a thick cardboard tube or a rolled-up towel. Then use a Mini Heat Press to press in sections—front first, cool down, then sides. Slower, but it works.
- Time & Temp: Hat materials are usually thicker. Add 5–8 seconds to pressing time to ensure ink penetration.
🖱️ 5. Custom Mouse Pads — Desk Joy
Why It Sells: Office workers stare at their desks all day. A fun mouse pad is a little dose of joy. Plus, mouse pads are consumables—they get dirty and get reordered. Great repeat business potential.
The Challenge: Mouse pads are usually rubber base + polyester fabric top. Rubber smells when heated (normal). And the fabric has short fibers, so ink needs more time to soak in.
Pro Tips:
- Extend pressing time to 45–60 seconds (adjust based on thickness) for saturated colors.
- After pressing, weigh it down with a heavy book while cooling. This prevents curling from rubber shrinkage.
- Color Quality: For photo-realistic results, sublimation paper + high-polyester fabric mouse pads are unbeatable—colors stay vibrant forever. For cotton-blend surfaces, go with dtf printer transfers or heat transfer vinyl.
- Small Batch Hero: For small-sized, multi-design orders, a Mini Heat Press is a lifesaver. No heating and cooling a giant machine repeatedly.
Advanced Tips: How to Press "Anything"
Once you've mastered these five, your creative boundaries have already expanded. But what about weirdly shaped items? Keep these two universal hacks in mind:
HACK 01 Uneven Surfaces: If the item has raised areas (like a picture frame), cover it with a Teflon sheet (non-stick baking sheet). It buffers and distributes heat evenly across uneven spots.
HACK 02 Thick Items: If the item is too thick for the press to close? Don't force it! Loosen the pressure adjustment knob, add heat-resistant padding underneath to raise the item until it just touches the upper platen, then lock pressure.
Final Thoughts: Your Machine Is Capable of More Than You Think
Hopefully, this opens up your mind: The potential of your heat press goes way beyond t-shirts.
Whether you're cutting detailed heat transfer vinyl with a vinyl cutter for simple tees, printing full-color complex designs with a dtf printer, using sublimation paper with a tumbler heat press for drinkware, or pressing hats with a hat press—every combination of materials and tools opens a new creative frontier.
Experimenting with new materials and techniques not only makes crafting more fun but might also lead you to discover a profitable new niche. Time to pull that machine out of the corner and put it to work!


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