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Place the ironed sheet into your printer’s tray so it prints on the fabric. Double-check your printer settings and print. Place the print onto a flat surface and let it dry for 24 hours. Wedge your fingernail into a corner and peel the fabric and freezer paper apart.
Be sure to place the fabric either face-down or face-up depending on how your printer feeds the paper from the tray to the printing area. You want the ink to go directly onto the fabric. If you’re not sure how your printer feeds paper through, do a test run by printing onto regular printer paper.  Only inkjet printers can print onto fabric, so double-check that your printer isn’t a laser printer. You may also want to do a test print of the image so the sizing, color, and orientation settings are correct. If not, you may need to adjust your printer settings. Before you press the print button, make sure that you’ve selected your desired print settings. For instance, you might want to select the highest quality settings possible or change the size of the print. If your printer has a high-quality photo setting, select that one because it will give you the clearest image. Place the printed product onto a dry, flat surface and let it dry for at least 1 day. Even if it feels dry to the touch, it’s better to wait to peel it off just in case. It may be tempting to peel some of it back right away to get a peek, but doing so could cause the ink to run and, as a result, distort and smudge the image. Once the ink is dry, wedge your fingernail into one of the corners between the two sheets and carefully peel them apart. Go slowly and be careful not to stretch or pull on the fabric. It may help to place the bonded sheets near the edge of a flat surface and bend one of the corners back.