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Why Do DTF Transfers Have White Outlines?

Written By Chris Knop

Updated 7/2/2026

5 Minute Read

A white outline on a DTF transfer almost always comes down to being summarized as one thing: white ink showing where you don't want it. Every transfer has a layer of white ink printed behind the color to keep the design bright on dark fabric. When that white layer reaches past the edge of the artwork, you get a halo — a thin white line around text, a logo, or the outside of the design. On black, navy, or charcoal shirts, even a little extra white stands out.

 

Most of the time it is preventable, and it comes from one of two places: how the file was built, or how the white underbase was handled at print. Here is how both of them work and what to check before you upload.

How a DTF Transfer Is Layered

Every transfer is printed in layers:

  1. Color ink — the artwork you actually see.
  2. White ink — sits behind the color so it stays opaque instead of fading into dark fabric.
  3. Adhesive powder — bonds the print to the garment when you press it.

That white layer is not optional. Without it, colors go dull or disappear on anything. The trouble only starts when the white extends past the color it is supposed to be hiding behind.

What “Choke” Means

The fix for that is a setting called choke. Choke is how far the white underbase is pulled inward from the edge of the color, so the white tucks behind the artwork instead of poking out around it. More choke pulls the white in further; less choke lets it sit closer to the edge.

 

There is no single choke value that is right for every design. A bold, solid logo, distressed artwork, thin script, and soft watercolor edges all behave differently. Pull the white in too little and it peeks out as a halo. Pull it in too much and the color edges lose the white support underneath them and look thin or washed out.

 

At Armor Ink, our team reviews artwork and adjusts choke settings when needed instead of relying on one universal setting for every file. It is a small thing that quietly prevents a lot of white edges.

The Common Causes

The White Underbase Reaches Too Far

This is the production-side cause, and choke is the answer to it. When the white is pulled in correctly for the design, it stays hidden behind the color.

 

Soft or Transparent Edges in the File

This is the one that catches most people, and it happens in the artwork long before it reaches the printer. Edges that look clean on a white screen often carry faint, semi-transparent pixels — anti-aliasing, leftover shadows, glow effects, or a background that was not fully removed.

 

The printer still reads those faint pixels as part of the design and lays white ink behind them, and that shows up as a haze or halo after pressing.

 

Small text, thin lines, faded or glow-heavy graphics, screenshots, and social-media images are common offenders.

 

Low-Resolution or Stretched Artwork

When a file is blurry or has been blown up well past its real size, the edges go jagged and the printer has less clean edge information to work with. That makes the underbase more visible and the border rougher.

Build your file at 300 DPI at the size you are printing. A small 3' 300 DPI image blown up to 12 inches is no longer 300 DPI.

 

A White or Gray Border Already Baked Into the File

Sometimes the outline is in the artwork before it ever reaches us — a fringe left behind by a rough background removal, a trace-and-fill, or a design originally made for a white background and never cleaned up for transparent printing.

 

Zoom in tight on your edges and look for a faint white, gray, or checkerboard-adjacent halo. If it is there in the file, it will be there on the shirt.

How to Prevent It Before You Upload

Clean files do most of the work. A few habits that make the difference:

  • Start high-resolution. Use at least 300 DPI at final print size. For a 12-inch print, build the file around 12 inches wide at 300 DPI instead of enlarging a small image to fit.
  • Check the edges on a dark background. A design can look flawless on white and still hide stray pixels. Drop it over a black background before you export — halos and soft edges jump right out.
  • Skip screenshots and copied images. They are usually low-resolution and full of compression and edge artifacts. Upload the original file whenever you can.
  • Keep small details clean. Tiny text, fine lines, and delicate distressing are the hardest things to print sharp. If you are not sure a detail will hold up at final size, thicken it or size it up a little.

If you are not sure about a file, you can send it to us and we will take a look before it prints. A sample is also a good way to test a tricky design before you commit to a full order.

What Armor Ink Does on Our End

White outlines are not only an artwork problem — printer setup matters too. We print a white underbase behind your color to keep designs vibrant on dark garments, and our team reviews artwork to look for problems before we hit print.

 

That extra step heads off a lot of visible white edges.

 

What it cannot do is rescue a file that already has the problem built in. Transparent pixels, blurry edges, low-resolution art, and half-removed backgrounds can still produce a halo even with the printer dialed in perfectly.

 

The sharpest results come from both ends doing their part: a clean file from you, careful white and choke handling from us. That is true whether you order transfers by size or build a gang sheet.

Can a White Outline Be Fixed After Printing?

No. Once the white and color layers are printed and cured, the transfer cannot be edited — the fix has to happen in the file beforehand.

 

That is the whole case for zooming in on your edges before you upload. A couple of minutes checking the artwork can save a reprint later.

Frequently asked questions

Why Does My DTF Transfer Have a White Halo Around It?

Usually because the the file had faint, semi-transparent pixels around the edges that picked up white ink behind them.

 

What Is a Choke Setting?

It controls how far the white underbase is pulled in from the edge of your design. Set right, it keeps the white hidden behind the color instead of showing around it.

 

Can Transparent Pixels Really Cause This?

Yes — it is one of the most common causes. Soft or partially transparent edge pixels get a white backing just like solid color does, which looks like a halo after pressing.

 

Does Low-Resolution Artwork Make It Worse?

Yes. Blurry or stretched edges make transparent pixels. Use a file that is 300 DPI at final print size whenever possible.

 

Is a White Outline Always the Printer’s Fault?

No. It can come from print setup, but just as often it is transparent pixels, poor edges, low resolution, or a poorly removed background in the file itself.

 

What File Type Works Best?

A high-resolution PNG with a genuinely clean transparent background is a safe bet. Properly prepared vector art works well too. What matters most is solid, intentional edges — the format matters less than the cleanup.

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