Embroidery Artwork Guide

How to Prepare Your Logo for Embroidery

Embroidery turns your logo into stitches, so very small text, gradients and fine detail may need adjustment before production.

A clean original file helps the logo convert more neatly into an embroidery-ready format.

Buying Guide Library

Clear answers before customers request a quote.

  • Clear answer in the first section
  • Comparison guidance where useful
  • Internal links to commercial pages
  • FAQ and quote CTA on every guide
  • No minimum order
  • Central London production
  • Print and embroidery
  • Artwork checked

Quick Answer

The Short Version

Embroidery turns your logo into stitches, so very small text, gradients and fine detail may need adjustment before production.

Buying Advice

Send the Best File You Have

Vector artwork is best, but high-resolution image files can also help. Avoid tiny screenshots where possible.

Buying Advice

Check the Logo Detail

Small text, thin lines and gradients can be difficult to stitch. The artwork may need simplifying for a clean result.

Real Work Proof

Add Photos and Examples Before Launch

The guide template is ready for finished garment photos, close-ups and short customer examples when real project images are available.

Related Products

Products That Fit This Guide

A small product block keeps guide pages connected to the buying journey without turning them into category pages.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can every logo be embroidered?

Most logos can be prepared, but some need simplification for stitch quality and readability.

Can embroidery use exact brand colours?

Thread colours are matched as closely as practical, but they may not be identical to screen colours or print inks.

Ready to Create Branded Clothing?

Tell us what you need, upload your logo and we will help you choose the right garment, decoration method and turnaround.