Birthday Iron-On Transfers from Mom's Break

By Jan K., The Proofer

© Copyright 2006

 

  New Page 1

This tutorial illustrates how to use an iron-on transfer to make a T-shirt. The same instructions should be used for whatever garment you wish to use, such as a sweatshirt, sleeveless T, or baby onesie. The iron-on transfer shown is available from Mom's Break, and the link for the free printable iron-on transfers (for birthdays 1-10) is shown below in the tutorial.

Go to How To Use Iron-On Transfer Paper for tips on using iron-on transfer paper.

 

Step 1.
  • Go to Mom's Break Birthday to get the free printable birthday iron-on transfers.
  • Print the iron-on transfer onto transfer paper (which is available in stores like Target and Wal-Mart, as well as office supply stores like Office Depot and Staples).

Note: You should read the instructions that come with the transfer paper that you buy before you print the iron-on transfer. The transfers provided by Mom's Break have already been reversed (or mirrored). However, some transfer papers do not require that the transfer be reversed prior to printing (especially the transfer paper used for "dark" shirts). If you have that type of transfer paper, you will have re-reverse these transfers. For a brief tutorial about how you can do that, go to How to Re-Flip an Iron-On Transfer.

If you need blank T-shirts, sweatshirts, baby onesies, or other garments, you will find a link to this and other blank shirts at Mom's Break.

Step 2.

Trim around the image, just inside the dotted lines.

Step 3.

Position the transfer on garment. You might want to use a rule to make sure that you have it positioned evenly on the garment.

As shown here, the image is face down. However, please be sure to follow the instructions that come with your transfer paper.

Step 4.

Refer to the instructions that come with your transfer paper for the proper amount of ironing time.

Step 5.

As you iron, apply steady and even downward pressure. Continually move iron in a circular pattern or in up and down, back and forth motions. Do not allow the iron the remain in one place for more than a second or two, as this might scorch the garment.

Step 6.

When the ironing is complete, allow the garment to cool.

You will notice here that the paper is slightly scorched---but not the garment. This is normal.

Step 7.

Once the garment is completely cool to the touch, you can begin to peel off the backing.

It is easiest to start in a corner. I like to put one or two fingers underneath and push up as I start to peel away the paper. This prevents me from "picking" at the actual iron-on image.

Step 8.

Peel the paper very slowly.

Step 9.

As you peel, try to peel the paper as uniformly as possible so that you don't pull or distort the image.

Step 10.

The iron-on transfer is now complete and the garment is ready to wear.

To launder, I suggest that you turn the garment inside out, and place inside a laundry bag (such as you would use for delicates or lingerie) or put it in a pillowcase and then close the pillowcase with a couple of safety pins. This will prevent the iron-on image from being "agitated" during the wash and rinse cycle.

It is best to hang-dry the garment instead of putting it in the dryer. However, if you prefer to put it in the dryer, use a low heat setting and remove the garment as soon as it is dry (do not allow to over-dry).

This completes the tutorial for the iron-on transfer.

  New Page 1

 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jan's

Reading Room

If you have enjoyed the illustrated tutorials for these cards and crafts, please visit Jan's Reading Room for a wide variety of other fun projects! Everything is free, and most projects provide free printables for your personal use.
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Use Jan's Dough free easy-to-follow recipes for Sourdough Bread---no special kitchen appliances, machines, or utensils are needed!

Jan's Dough

There's more! Learn how to make bread! It's easy! Use the free, illustrated tutorials provided by Jan's Dough to make great-tasting sourdough bread, French bread, and more! Get free tips, recipes, and follow the easy-to-read illustrated instructions---all recipes come with a printable recipe (that is free of color and ads).
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jan's

Free Content

Looking for a variety of free content articles? Please go to Jan's Free Content for free content articles on Work-At-Home, Grammar and Writing, Holidays, Family, Crafts, and more.
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jan's Tips

Jan's Tips offers tips, suggestions, and ideas for practical solutions to managing your time, your job, your house, and your life. Get good advice that you can implement today!

Jan's Tutorials, also available on Jan's Tips, are easy-to-read-and-understand tutorials for using MS Word and MS Paint, as well as using other computer-based features and programs to create cards, gift tags, and labels. 

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

 

Cure your printables madness!

 

 

 

 Jan's Reading Room is proud to partner with Mom's Break!

Be sure to visit Mom's Break for a wide variety of free printable cards, invitations, certificates, coloring books, and all sorts of other paper-based crafts and projects. Every free printable is easy to download and you can print all of the free printables as often as you like! Many of the free printables are great to use for homeschooling, the classroom, daycare and after-school facilities, scouts, and church groups!

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Can't find the free printable or illustrated tutorial that you need?

Go to to look through Jan's Reading Room and Moms Break for the free printables and free illustrated tutorials that will help you to create uniquely personalized cards, invitations, certificates, decorations, and other paper-based crafts!

Bookmark this page to return to it later:

  Bookmark and Share

 

Print Me Free

is an all-new website owned and operated by Kimberly of Moms Break, and is full of new printables for a wide variety of uses, including school, homeschool, at-home business, parenting, and more!

 

Jan's Reading Room also contributes

printables and tutorials to Print Me Free.

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Do you need free content article

This illustrated tutorial or craft may not be used as free content. For free content for your website or in your newsletter go to Jan's Free Content (http://www.jansfreecontent.com).

Jan K., The Proofer owns the copyright on all tutorials and crafts. © Copyright 2005 to present.