Mug Printing Methods Explained: Sublimation vs Pad Print vs Decal (Malaysia)

Two mugs can carry the same logo and behave completely differently in the wash: one looks crisp after a year, the other fades by month three. The difference is the printing method, not the mug. If you’re ordering branded mugs in Malaysia, the method you choose decides your colours, your durability, your cost — and whether your client’s mug still looks good when it matters. Here’s a plain-English guide to the main mug printing methods and which to choose.

Short version. Pad print = cheap and durable for 1–2 colour logos. Decal = detailed multi-colour, fired on and tough. Sublimation = full-colour photo wraps but needs a coated mug and gentler care. Laser engraving = permanent mono mark. In-glaze = the most durable of all. Match the method to your artwork and how the mug will be used.

The methods, decoded

Pad / silkscreen print

Ink applied directly, one colour per screen. It’s the most economical, fast and durable for simple logos, and it works on almost any ceramic mug. Each extra spot colour adds a screen and a setup, so it’s best for one- to two-colour brand marks.

Decal / transfer (fired)

A printed transfer is applied and then fired onto the glaze. This gives detailed, multi-colour artwork that’s genuinely durable and dishwasher-friendly — the sweet spot for colourful logos that still need to last. Costs more than one-colour pad print.

Sublimation (full-colour wrap)

Heat transfers a full-colour image — photos, gradients, edge-to-edge wraps — into a special poly-coated white mug. Unbeatable for vibrant artwork, but it only works on coated mugs, and the print lasts longest with hand-washing. Ideal for retail and campaign mugs where the look is the point.

Laser engraving

Burns a permanent mark into stoneware or coated mugs — colourless, but classy and indestructible. Great for an understated, premium mono logo that will never wash off.

In-glaze / under-glaze

The artwork is fused under or into the glaze at high temperature — the most durable finish available, effectively part of the mug. Premium cost and best for higher volumes, but it will outlast every other method.

Side-by-side

Method Colours Durability Relative cost Best for
Pad / silkscreen 1–2 Good RM Simple logos, budget runs
Decal (fired) Full Very good RM RM Colourful, lasting logos
Sublimation Full / photo Fair (hand-wash) RM RM Photos, full wraps, retail
Laser engraving None (mono) Permanent RM RM Premium stoneware gifts
In-glaze Full Excellent RM RM RM High-volume, premium retail

A practical guide — the right method depends on your artwork, mug body and how the mug will be washed.

Matching the method to the job

One/two-colour logo, big volume → pad print. Cheapest and tough.

Colourful logo that must last → fired decal.

Photo / full-wrap artwork → sublimation on a coated mug.

Premium, permanent, understated → laser engraving or in-glaze.

The durability question, answered honestly

The most common disappointment we see is a beautiful full-wrap sublimation mug that fades after months of dishwasher cycles. It’s not a defect — sublimation simply prefers hand-washing. If your recipients will throw the mug in a dishwasher daily, choose fired decal or in-glaze and accept a slightly higher cost; if it’s a display or gentle-use gift, sublimation’s vivid look wins. The method drives both durability and budget, so it’s worth reading alongside our custom mug printing pricing guide before deciding. For broader context, our roundup of corporate gift ideas for Malaysian businesses shows where mugs fit a campaign.

Frequently asked questions

Which mug printing method is most durable?

In-glaze is the most durable, followed by fired decal and laser engraving. Pad print is durable for simple logos; sublimation looks best but lasts longest with hand-washing.

Can you print full-colour photos on a mug?

Yes — sublimation handles full-colour photos and edge-to-edge wraps, on a poly-coated white mug. For colourful but more durable results, fired decal is the alternative.

Which method is cheapest?

One-colour pad/silkscreen print is the most economical, especially at volume.

Not sure which print method fits?

Send us your artwork and how the mug will be used, and we’ll recommend the method. Browse the full custom mug range to see the options.

Talk to our mug team →

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