What Is Embroidery?

Here’s the clean version ready to paste into WordPress:

Embroidery is a decoration method in which a design — typically a company logo or text — is stitched directly into fabric using thread. It is widely considered one of the most premium and durable decoration options in the promotional products industry, producing a textured, three-dimensional result that communicates quality and attention to detail.

How does embroidery work?

The embroidery process begins with digitizing the artwork. A skilled technician converts the client’s logo or design into an embroidery file format — typically DST or EMB — that instructs an industrial embroidery machine on stitch type, direction, density, and color sequence.

This digitizing step is typically done once per design and represents the primary setup cost.
Once the file is ready, the embroidery machine stitches the design onto the garment using thread spools loaded with the specified colors. Modern multi-head machines can embroider multiple items simultaneously, making medium and large runs efficient. The result is a stitched design that is bonded to the fabric — not printed on top of it — giving it a level of permanence and durability that distinguishes it from surface-level decoration methods.

What products are best suited for embroidery?

Embroidery works best on structured, stable fabrics that hold their shape under the weight and tension of stitching. The strongest candidates include:

  • Polo shirts and button-downs — chest and sleeve placements are classic and professional.
  • Baseball caps and structured hats — the front panel is the most common placement.
  • Fleece jackets and vests — left chest or full-back placements work well on heavier fabrics.
  • Bags and totes — structured bags with flat panels accept embroidery cleanly.
  • Beanies and knit items — require careful stabilization to prevent distortion during stitching.
    Embroidery is less suitable for very thin fabrics (like lightweight performance wear) or highly stretchy materials, where the tension of stitching can distort the garment.

What makes embroidery the right decoration choice?

Choose embroidery when perceived quality matters most. The tactile, dimensional quality of embroidered decoration communicates premium craftsmanship that differs from most printed decoration methods — which is why it is the dominant method for executive gifts, corporate uniforms, golf apparel, and professional services firm merchandise.

Embroidery also has a permanence advantage. Stitched designs hold up through repeated washing and extended use, often outlasting many printed or heat-transferred alternatives. For garments intended to be used daily over months or years — staff uniforms, team jackets, branded fleeces — embroidery delivers a long-lasting brand impression.

When should I choose another decoration method instead of embroidery?

Embroidery is not the right choice for every project. Its limitations become relevant in specific circumstances:

  • Complex, highly detailed artwork — very fine lines, intricate patterns, and photographic imagery are difficult to render in thread. Stitch counts required for extreme detail drive costs up quickly, and the result rarely matches what a digital print can achieve.
  • Gradients and color transitions — embroidery cannot reproduce true gradual color blending. Each color in an embroidery design is a distinct thread, so logos with gradient fills need to be simplified before digitizing.
  • Very thin or stretchy fabrics — athletic performance wear, mesh, and lightweight knits can be difficult to embroider effectively due to distortion from stitching tension. DTF printing or screen printing are better choices for these substrates.
  • Low-budget, high-quantity campaigns — for large runs where cost-per-unit is the primary driver and premium aesthetics are less critical, screen printing typically offers a lower unit cost at scale.

How is embroidery priced?

Embroidery pricing is driven by stitch count — the total number of individual stitches required to complete the design. A simple, bold logo might require 5,000 to 8,000 stitches; a complex, detailed design might require 15,000 or more. Higher stitch counts mean longer machine time and therefore higher unit cost.

Additional pricing factors include: number of decoration placements (left chest, sleeve, back, and cap front are each a separate charge); thread colors (typically included up to a standard number per design, depending on the decorator); quantity ordered (per-unit cost decreases significantly at higher quantities); and the one-time digitizing setup fee, which is typically charged once per design, though additional charges may apply for size or application changes.

What is the typical turnaround time for embroidered promotional products?

Turnaround varies by supplier and order complexity, but most standard embroidery orders run approximately seven to ten business days from approved artwork to shipment. Rush services are available through many suppliers for an additional charge, with some offering three to five business day turnarounds on simpler designs and standard items.

The digitizing step adds lead time on first-time orders, so building in extra time when working with a new logo or design is always wise.

How do I find embroidery suppliers through ASI?

ASI’s product marketplace allows distributors to search for embroidery-decorated products and filter by product category, price, minimum order quantity, and decoration method. Suppliers who specialize in embroidery list their capabilities within their ESP+ profiles, making it straightforward to identify the right partner for any apparel or accessory decoration project.

Join ASI to access one of the industry’s largest verified supplier networks for embroidered promotional products.