Sublimated patches: unlimited color
Embroidery counts colors; sublimation doesn't. Gradients, photographs, full scenes — printed into the patch at photographic resolution, cut to shape, and sewn to a cap built in the same run.
The technique for art that thread can't carry
Every decoration technique has a domain. Embroidery owns bold, flat marks. Weaving owns fine lines. Sublimation owns everything photographic: a sunrise gradient, a product shot, a label design with a dozen colors and soft shadows. Because the dye is printed into the patch fabric — not stitched or laid on top — there is no color count, no color charge, and no loss of detail at small sizes.
Reproduction is exact. Your brand artwork goes in as a file and comes out as fabric, with colors verified against your PMS references on the pre-production proof. For beverage labels, event artwork, and any design a marketing team has already fought over, that fidelity is the entire argument.
Construction detail: our sublimated patches are sewn on, typically with a stitched border that frames the print and anchors it for the life of the cap. Heat-pressed patches curl; sewn ones don't. And because printing, cutting, and sewing share one roof, patch placement repeats identically across the run.
Compare the patch family before you decide: woven for fine monochrome detail, leather for premium weight, the full sublimation specification — including all-over printed builds on bucket hats and performance caps.
Styles that pair with a printed patch
Sublimated patch questions
Dye-sublimation prints your artwork directly into patch fabric at full photographic resolution — gradients, shading, unlimited colors, no per-color charges. The patch is cut to shape and sewn to the cap, typically with a stitched border.
When the artwork can't be reduced to thread: photographic elements, smooth gradients, complex scenes, or more colors than embroidery can economically carry. If the art is bold and flat, embroidery is often the better spec — we'll tell you which at the mockup stage.
Yes. The dye bonds into the fabric rather than sitting on top, so the image doesn't crack or peel — and the patch is sewn on, not heat-pressed, so attachment outlasts the cap.
Send the file marketing approved
Every gradient and shadow survives the trip. Mockup in 24 hours; quote itemized in plain dollars.
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