What Is A Promo Decorator?

In the promotional products industry, a decorator is a company or individual that applies branding — logos, text, artwork — onto a product using one or more decoration methods such as screen printing, embroidery, pad printing, laser engraving, or digital printing. Decorators are a distinct professional role in the supply chain, bridging the gap between suppliers who produce blank merchandise and distributors who sell finished, branded products to end buyers.

What does a decorator do?

A decorator’s core function is transforming an unbranded product into a branded one. This involves receiving blank merchandise from a supplier or distributor, applying the client’s logo or design using the appropriate decoration method, and returning the finished product — either to the distributor for delivery to the end buyer, or directly to the end buyer on the distributor’s behalf.

Decoration requires both technical skill and equipment investment. Different decoration methods require fundamentally different machinery — a screen printing operation requires printing presses, exposure units, and curing equipment; an embroidery studio requires multi-head embroidery machines and digitizing software; a laser engraving operation requires precision laser systems and ventilation. Most decorators specialize in one or a few methods rather than offering every technique.

How do decorators fit into the promotional products supply chain?

The promo supply chain typically flows through three roles:

  • Suppliers manufacture or import blank merchandise — the base products before any branding is applied. Many suppliers also offer in-house decoration, but not all.
  • Decorators apply the branding — either as independent businesses contracted by distributors, or as part of a supplier’s in-house operation.
  • Distributors sell the finished, decorated products to end buyers. They act as the client-facing professional, managing product selection, artwork coordination, order management, and delivery.
    In many cases, a single company fills two or three of these roles simultaneously — a supplier who decorates in-house, or a distributor who owns decoration equipment. But the roles are conceptually distinct, and understanding them helps every participant in the supply chain communicate more clearly.

What decoration methods do decorators use?

Decorators work with a range of methods, each suited to specific product types and design requirements:

  • Screen printing — transferring ink through a mesh stencil onto flat surfaces, ideal for apparel and bags at high quantities.
  • Embroidery — stitching designs into fabric with thread, used for apparel, hats, and soft goods.
  • Pad printing — transferring ink via a flexible silicone pad onto curved or irregular surfaces, the standard method for pens and small items.
  • Laser engraving — using a laser to mark metal, wood, glass, and leather with permanent precision.
  • Digital printing — inkjet-based printing for full-color designs on flat substrates, including direct-to-garment (DTG) and UV printing.
  • DTF (direct-to-film) — printing onto film and heat-transferring to garments, growing rapidly as a versatile full-color method.
  • Dye sublimation — infusing ink into synthetic fabrics and hard substrates for full-coverage, photographic-quality results.

Can a distributor also be a decorator?

Yes, and many are. Some distributors invest in their own decoration equipment — particularly embroidery machines for smaller apparel programs or heat-press equipment for custom transfers — to control quality, reduce turnaround time, and improve margins by bringing decoration in-house.

However, most distributors outsource decoration to specialized suppliers or independent decorators. This keeps overhead lower and allows distributors to offer a wider range of decoration methods without managing multiple equipment types. The decision to decorate in-house versus outsource depends on the distributor’s volume, the methods their clients most commonly need, and their operational appetite for managing production equipment.

What is the difference between a decorator and a supplier?

The distinction is about function rather than identity. A supplier’s primary function is producing or sourcing blank products. A decorator’s primary function is applying branding to products. In practice, many suppliers are also decorators — they manufacture blanks and decorate them in the same facility. But a decorator who does not manufacture product (sourcing blanks from suppliers and decorating them on behalf of distributors) is performing a distinct, specialized role in the supply chain.

Does ASI serve decorators?

Yes. ASI recognizes decorators as a distinct membership category with tools and resources tailored to their specific role. Decorator members access ASI’s supplier network for sourcing blank merchandise, use ESP+ for managing orders and client communications, and benefit from ASI’s industry education and market research. Learn more about ASI’s decorator membership.

How do decorators ensure artwork quality and color accuracy?

Professional decorators use pre-production proofing as a quality control step — providing clients with a visual mockup or physical sample for approval before committing to a full production run. For color accuracy, decorators work with standardized color matching systems (PMS — Pantone Matching System colors are the industry standard for promotional products) to ensure that the client’s brand colors are reproduced consistently across production runs, suppliers, and decoration methods.

Providing vector artwork in the correct PMS colors significantly reduces the risk of color discrepancies and speeds up the proofing process.

How do I find decorators through ASI?

ASI’s product marketplace connects distributors with suppliers who offer a full range of decoration capabilities. Decoration method filters make it easy to identify the right partner for each project. If you are a decorator looking to join ASI’s network, explore ASI membership to access sourcing tools, supplier connections, and business resources designed for decoration professionals.