Can You Use Clipart for Fabric, Sublimation & Craft Blanks? (Mugs, Shirts, Tumblers & More)
💌 Introduction
Fabric prints, sublimation mugs, cozy sweatshirts and tumblers are some of the most loved ways to turn digital art into real-life gifts. Once you discover beautiful clipart, it is very tempting to put it on every blank in your craft room and maybe even start selling those pieces.
But then the worry kicks in: “Am I actually allowed to use this clipart on fabric and mugs?” What about sublimation PNGs, transfers, or POD platforms like Printful and Gelato?
This guide walks through how WondersArtist licensing works for fabric, sublimation and craft blanks so you can create and sell with confidence. We will keep everything plain, friendly, and specific to real crafters and small shops.
Note: this article is general information, not legal advice. Always follow the rules of the marketplace or print provider you use.
Table of Content
✨ The Quick Answer 🧵 What Counts as a Physical End Product? 🏡 Using Clipart on Fabric & Blanks at Home 🔥 Sublimation & Print-on-Demand (POD) Rules 🚫 What Is Not Allowed with WondersArtist Art ⚖️ Logos, Characters & Other Rights 🪡 Practical Workflow Tips for Beautiful Results 📚 Related Licensing Guides 💎 All Access Membership✨ The Quick Answer
Under the WondersArtist License you may absolutely use our clipart on fabric, sublimation prints, and craft blanks, both for personal projects and for items you sell.
- ✅ You can print or press designs onto mugs, shirts, tumblers, tote bags, pillows, blankets, keychains, and other physical products.
- ✅ You can sell unlimited quantities of those physical items, worldwide, forever.
- ✅ You can use our art with home equipment (Cricut, Silhouette, sublimation printer, heat press) or POD companies (Printful, Gelato, etc.).
- ❌ You may not sell or share our graphics as standalone PNGs or “sublimation bundles” where buyers receive the raw artwork.
- ❌ You may not upload our source files into any library where others can grab them as stock assets.
In simple words: selling finished products is okay, selling our clipart as clipart is not.
🧵 What Counts as a Physical End Product?
Our license uses the phrase “Physical End Products”. For fabric and blanks, that means:
- A real-world item you can hold in your hands (mug, t-shirt, hoodie, tote, bookmark, towel, pillow, fabric panel, etc.).
- The design is printed, pressed, embroidered, or otherwise fixed onto that item.
- Your customer receives the physical piece only, not our clipart files.
WondersArtist license summary for physical items:
- ✅ Unlimited physical end products for sale or gifts.
- ✅ You can edit, combine, add text, change colors, and build your own compositions.
- ✅ You can use the same artwork across multiple product types (matching mugs, shirts and tote bags).
- ❌ You cannot include a digital download folder of our PNGs along with the physical product.
🏡 Using Clipart on Fabric & Blanks at Home
If you are using a home setup (Cricut, Silhouette, sublimation printer, DTF transfers, etc.), the rules are nicely simple.
Personal-use projects
- Make as many personal gifts as you like for friends and family: blankets, baby onesies, teacher mugs, holiday pajamas and more.
- You do not need to track numbers. The license is not capped per piece.
Products you sell
- You may sell physical items featuring WondersArtist art on Etsy, your own website, craft fairs, local shops and similar places.
- You may reuse designs across your line — for example, a floral collection on shirts, tote bags and cosmetic bags.
- You can outsource production (e.g. a local print shop) as long as they only print for you and do not reuse the art as their own stock.
As long as your customer only receives the “finished thing” and cannot pull out our clipart files from it, you are within the cozy safe zone of the license.
🔥 Sublimation & Print-on-Demand (POD) Rules
Sublimation sits halfway between “digital file” and “physical item,” so it helps to separate two different business models.
1. Printing your own sublimation transfers
- ✅ You may print and press sublimation designs with WondersArtist art onto blanks you sell (mugs, shirts, tumblers, slates, etc.).
- ✅ You may sell the pressed items (finished mug, finished shirt, finished tumbler).
- 🚫 You may not sell loose sublimation transfers as a way to redistribute our art in almost-digital form (e.g. huge stacks of transfers where the buyer’s main goal is to reuse the graphics however they want).
2. Using POD companies (Printful, Gelato, etc.)
Our license allows you to use WondersArtist items with POD platforms. You may:
- ✅ Upload finished designs using our clipart for printing on demand.
- ✅ Sell unlimited orders of those POD products (mugs, shirts, posters, pillowcases, etc.).
- 🚫 Not upload our raw PNGs or clipart sets to the POD platform as a stock asset library.
- 🚫 Not market your POD listing as a way for people to download or extract artwork for their own reuse.
For a deeper dive into POD rules, you can read our dedicated guide: Can You Use Clipart with Print-on-Demand? POD Rules for Crafters & Small Shops.
🚫 What Is Not Allowed with WondersArtist Art
The heart of the license is simple: finished products = yes, graphics packs = no. For fabric, sublimation and blanks, that means you may not:
- ❌ Sell “sublimation PNG bundles” where customers receive our art as clean, reusable PNGs (even if you added small words or moved things around).
- ❌ Sell “DTF transfer packs” or printed sheets where the obvious purpose is to give other crafters ready-made designs for their own product lines.
- ❌ Include a bonus download folder of clipart with your blanks (for example, “Buy this mug and get all the floral PNGs I used for it!”).
- ❌ Re-package our artwork into fabric design packs where the main appeal is to cut out or reuse the designs as clipart.
- ❌ Upload our graphics to any library, app, or site as generic assets for others to design with (stock sites, design tools, “build your own print” services, etc.).
If your listing looks more like “A bundle of cute images you can put on anything” rather than “A finished product you can use or wear,” it is probably too close to being a graphics pack.
⚖️ Logos, Characters & Other Rights
Our license also reminds you to avoid infringing other people’s rights. Even on a simple mug or t-shirt, it is important to be careful with:
- Famous characters, brands, and logos – do not combine our art with copyrighted characters or brand names in a way that suggests official merch or endorsement.
- Real-person likenesses – do not imply that a real person or celebrity is connected to your product unless you have explicit permission.
- Platform-specific rules – marketplaces like Etsy, Amazon or Redbubble can have additional policies about trademarks and parody; always follow those too.
When in doubt, keep your designs cozy, generic and original: cute animals, flowers, seasons, sentiments and everyday themes are usually the safest path.
🪡 Practical Workflow Tips for Beautiful Results
A few simple habits can make your fabric and sublimation projects look more professional and stay well within the license at the same time.
1. Build a “master design” file
- Create your composition in a design program (Canva, Affinity, Photoshop, Procreate, etc.).
- Use layers and text so you can adapt it to different blanks (11oz mug mockup, 20oz tumbler wrap, shirt front, etc.).
- Export flattened print files (PNG/JPG/PDF) for each product — keep the original editable file for yourself only.
2. Keep print resolution high
All WondersArtist clipart is created at high resolution suitable for printing, so you can scale comfortably for most craft projects. For extra crisp results:
- Set your canvas to at least 300 dpi.
- Size your design to match the blank (for example 3600×2400 px for a 12" × 8" area).
- Avoid enlarging tiny graphics far beyond their original size.
If you like careful print results, these two guides pair wonderfully:
- How to Resize Digital Clipart for Perfect Printing
- How to Print Digital Clipart for Perfect Crafting Results
3. Think in collections, not single images
- Create a cohesive set of products: matching apron, tea towel, mug and recipe card; or coordinated family shirts and tumblers.
- Reuse the same clipart bundle across several items to build a strong brand look while staying efficient.
📚 Related Licensing Guides
If you want a full, gentle overview of how licensing works for digital and physical products, these articles will help:
- Can You Use Clipart for Commercial Use? Simple License Guide for Crafters & Small Shops
- Can You Use Clipart with Print-on-Demand? POD Rules for Crafters & Small Shops
- Personal vs Commercial Use: What Clipart Licenses Really Mean
- Can You Use Free Clipart Commercially? License Red Flags for Crafters & Small Shops
💎 All Access Membership
If you are building a full line of mugs, shirts, tumblers and cozy fabric pieces, All Access Membership gives you a calm, predictable way to keep your designs fresh.
- ✨ Unlimited downloads from our full clipart, watercolor, digital paper and journal library
- 🧺 New releases included while your membership is active
- ⚡ Instant access to themed bundles for every season and niche
- 🔁 Perpetual license for everything you downloaded while active, even if you cancel later
🌷 Final Thoughts
Turning clipart into cozy real-world products is one of the happiest parts of crafting. With the right license, you can put your favorite designs onto fabric, mugs and tumblers without second-guessing every listing.
As long as you are selling finished physical items and not reselling our graphics as stand-alone art or sublimation packs, WondersArtist licensing is here to support your shop as it grows.