Screen printing, DTF, embroidery, and a hat bar all work on site at Austin events - they just shine in different situations. Here is how to choose.
Live screen printing
The classic. Real presses, real ink, pulled in front of guests. It is the most efficient option for high volume and bold one- to three-color designs - ideal for busy SXSW activations. See live screen printing.
Live DTF printing
Full-color, photo-real transfers pressed on the spot - no screens, no color limits, no minimums. Best for detailed logos, gradients, and short or mixed runs. See live DTF printing.
Live embroidery
Stitched-on-site monograms and logos - the upscale finish for VIP gifting, hospitality, and conference swag. See live embroidery.
Live hat bar
Guests pick a cap and press a patch - a build-your-own station that is pure activation gold and travels well. See the hat bar.
Rule of thumb: volume → screen printing; full color or small runs → DTF; premium gift → embroidery or hat bar. Most Austin events run one core station plus one upgrade.
Still deciding? Read screen printing vs DTF or send your event details and we will recommend a mix.
Austin proof
Local proof before the presses roll in
For Austin, the page you are reading is planned around real venue constraints, not a generic merch table. We map the nearest load-in, the available power, the line path, and the point where guests choose garments before they reach the press. That planning is what keeps the station looking sharp at Austin Convention Center, a Downtown Austin private event, or a smaller activation near Moody Center.
Merch Troop is based in Fullerton and travels with the same live-event production kit: presses, flash dryers, heat presses, blanks, folding tables, signage, and trained printers. A standard station needs roughly 10x10 ft and two 120V circuits, and a two-press setup can clear 100+ shirts per hour when the design menu is simple.