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6213 Karma

Review on πŸ‘• Clothing Optional Letters Numbers Transfer by Doris Tran

Revainrating 1 out of 5

Poor quality and NOT three letters each as advertised!

As the wife of a man who competes in motorsports, I am no stranger to making racing jerseys/t-shirts for him with a writing iron. I can unequivocally say that these are the worst of the ones I've used so far. They're paper thin, have no instructions for the uninitiated (you'll have to look for a very simplified guide here on Revain), the edges will separate from the fabric if you remove the plastic wrap after the fabric has cooled, and no matter how many times, if you iron the letters back down, the edges will peel off. I'll probably have to do a few inconspicuous stitches here and there to secure those loose edges, which kind of defeats the purpose of using an iron on products. I used 90% cotton/10% polyester t-shirts, so the shirts had a lot of cotton to make the letters "stick", but they just didn't hold up very well around the edges. For the experiment, I took out an old 100% cotton men's t-shirt and practiced with weird letters I didn't need, and the same thing happened - the edges peeling off, even after repeated ironing, cooling, etc. On top of that, there was only ONE " D” included, although according to the product description there are three of each. For the second competition jersey, I had to shape the "D" as best I could using the stem of the "P" and then part of the "Q" (these are square letters, so it was doable). both "R" I used were slightly shorter than the other letters; not very noticeable but thought I'd mention it. These emails gave me such a headache and created a job that might have taken me half an hour to complete over an hour and a half and I STILL have to go outside to sew the basket! I will never order those cheaply made, inferior letter hangers again!

Pros
  • Arts, Crafts and Sewing
Cons
  • I will add later