HOME HALFTONE FAQ Why halftone is necessary on black tees

Why halftone is necessary on black tees

On black tees, soft shadows and thin tonal boundaries often collapse first. That is why halftone is not just an effect—it is a way to preserve visual information under dark-garment print constraints.

What changes on black fabric

Common risk points when printing directly:

  • Soft gradients lose separation
  • Pale transitions become muddy
  • Fine detail feels flatter in hand than on screen

What halftone conversion solves

A good halftone pass helps keep:

  • Distinct tonal steps that remain readable
  • Better highlight-to-shadow transition behavior
  • A more stable sense of depth in real print conditions

How to validate before ordering

Use a simple before/after review:

  1. Compare original vs converted output at full view.
  2. Compare close-up detail around the most important focal areas.
  3. Prioritize readability and texture continuity over pure brightness.

Next step

If you need concrete reference framing, read the comparison guide: