Explore our collection of Classic Disney and Universal Studios SVG files. Perfect for all your creative projects. Files Included: SVG – DXF – EPS – PNG – PDF
This Disney World map is the perfect addition to any Disney lover's home, and makes for the perfect gift! This map includes Galaxy's edge! *FREE DOMESTIC SHIPPING* Order does not include frame. Printed on 110 lb white cardstock OR Watercolor Paper Will be shipped to you in a cellophane bag, backed with chipboard, in a chipboard mailer so insure it gets to you unharmed!
Shop Vintage 90s Cat Halloween Shirt, … and other curated products on LTK, the easiest way to shop everything from your favorite creators.
Don't wear what everyone else is wearing. You need one of these Unique Harry Potter T-Shirts to wear to the Wizarding World at Universal Studios.
Download 9 FREE Disney SVG Files for Cricut to make family vacation shirts and other Disney Cricut projects.
Planning a family trip to Orlando? Don't miss out on these FREE 25 Universal Studios Family Vacation SVG files for Cricut! Perfect for crafting shirts and souvenirs with your Cricut or Silhouette. Get inspired with fun design ideas to make your trip unforgettable! #SVGfilesforCricut #Free #Shirts #Orlando #Family #Cricut #Silhouette #Ideas #Fun
Don't wear what everyone else is wearing. You need one of these Unique Harry Potter T-Shirts to wear to the Wizarding World at Universal Studios.
Can't decide on the best matching family Disney shirts? We’ve done the hard work and found the cutest designs for you. 👕✨ These trendy outfits are perfect for your next Disney adventure, making for adorable photos and helping you keep track of everyone in the park. Get ready to add an extra sprinkle of pixie dust to your trip! 🌟🏰👨👩👧👦
Disney Family Vacations are simply one of the best family trips in my opinion. and they are only better with some Disney Family Shirts. Let's check out some amazing matching disney shirts for your next vacay!
Hit the pavement with these ultra-supportive trainers from HOKA®, featured in a fresh, energy-packed style with all the cushioning and breathability for a pair that's made for speed. **Features:** Creel jacquard upper, streamlined collar foam package, dual internal gusset, critical foam midsole, strategic rubber outsole coverage, anatomical tongue, lace-up closure **Why We <3 It:** The improved energy return on this pair is ready for everyday running and even races.
Experience the magic of Florida theme parks beyond Disney --LEGOLAND, Universal, Discovery Cove, Aquatica and more for non-stop fun.
Follow this step-by-step Universal Studios touring plan that will help you plan your day and tour with ease at Universal Studios in 2023!
Easy steps to Create Your Own Disney Shirt in 15 minutes. Show your #DisneySide with these fun shirts.
Categories Clothing / Shirts & Tops / T-Shirts SKU P40321954-MEN-HET-ROY-mcM47OKf You're taking a peek at the product Vintage Flying Cars Tee, Universal Shirt, Weasley Shirt For belong theme T-Shirts at Printerval Key features Solid colors are 100% cotton Heather colors are 50% cotton, 50% polyester (Sport Grey is 90% cotton, 10% polyester) Antique colors are 60% cotton, 40% polyester Care instructions Machine wash: warm (max 40C or 105F); Non-chlorine: bleach as needed; Tumble dry: medium; Do not iron; Do not dry-clean. Due to variations of light and color settings of computer/personal device screens, colors may appear slightly different from photographic images. Due to the manufacturing process, sizes of items listed in descriptions are approximate and actual size may vary slightly. Due to the manufacturing process, alignment of images may vary slightly Shop for attractive Vintage Flying Cars Tee, Universal Shirt, Weasley Shirt or see more T-Shirts products on https://printerval.com right now!
We are headed to Disney later this year so the crazy crafting has started. Back of easy tie blanket. BLANKET Today my toddler found some Mickey and Pooh fleece he just loved - so we grabbed a yard of each and threw together some tie blankets. He has been super excited about learning to use scissors so I let him cut a few of the strips too. We had fun and now have two small (read perfect for travel) Mickey/Pooh blankets. SHIRT Before we head to Disneyworld the Toddler is headed to Disney on Ice, with one of his best buds for his birthday. I saw some cute t-shirts made with dots from an eraser so I thought I would give it a try with a Mickey silhouette. I have not taken the wax paper stencil off yet because I'm too scared. I'm going to let it dry overnight to prevent any leakage. AUTOGRAPH BOOK I found some blank spiral bound books at Hobby Lobby. I painted them red and then with some painters tape painted the rest of them black. (I used Martha Stuart craft paint.) I had some white buttons laying around that I glued onto the book. Then I coated the whole thing in some modge podge. I used some sticker letters to put the kiddos names on the back. I have no idea how these will hold up, but my kids are toddlers so I think the chance of getting autographs is about the same as these being used for their drawings or stickers while they ride around in the stroller. WALKING STRAP I've seen these straps you attach to your stroller all over Pinterest and Etsy. They loop over your stroller handle and give your toddler a handle to hold when they don't feel like riding. Its a nice alternative to my kiddo holding my hand while I try to push the stroller and (typically) hold the baby. I know, I know.. why have a stroller? To hold my stuff of course :) I made a different type of handle for a friend who is currently at Disney. She wanted something a little shorter so I used elastic for the part that hooks to her stroller. Again, there are a ton of patterns on Pinterst - they even have long ones that hook to your purse. Could have used one of those today when I took both kids to Old Navy on my own... what was I thinking! More crafts to come...
Planning a trip to a Disney resort? If so, check out these awesome Disney shirts to get before you go on your next Disney vacation. Enjoy
Looking for the best Disney shirts for women for your time at the Disney parks? This list is filled with cute options that you'll love!
Planning for an Ultimate 3-Day Vacation at Universal Orlando Resort with your family is super simple with this 3-Day Itinerary to Universal Orlando Resort (With Downloadable Park Itineraries!). Stop daydreaming about your next vacation and start planning as I share all of our Universal Orlando tips and experiences in this 3-Day Universal Orlando Resort vacation.
Countdown to Disney with this darling Mickey Mouse inspired chain. Grab the FREE cut file today and use it with your Silhouette or Cricut!
Ambitious, Cunning, Leaders, and Resourceful. Harness your inner Snake with this Cunning design. Embroidered. Perfect for wzrd school. Universal, home, theme parks and more. Shirt Reads: Cunning This t-shirt is everything you've dreamed of and more. It feels soft and lightweight, with the right amount of stretch. It's comfortable and flattering for all. • 100% combed and ring-spun cotton (Heather colors contain polyester) • Fabric weight: 4.2 oz./yd.² (142 g/m²) • Pre-shrunk fabric • Side-seamed construction • Shoulder-to-shoulder taping • Blank product sourced from Nicaragua, Mexico, Honduras, or the US
Looking for inspiration for Disney outfits that stand out? From Disneyland to Disney World, these outfit ideas will make sure you're cute, casual, and chic, making your vacation even more memorable.
This is not a shirt I made. I just liked it. So I had to attempt my own. Prince Charming and I are getting ready for our trip to the World on the 17th. I cannot wait. CAN. NOT. WAIT!!!! So we've been buying those little odds and ends that are needed for the trip like cheap ponchos and anti-chafing stuff and new shoes. Since I'm me, and I'm not happy unless I've got some random craft project in the works, I decided to make tie-dyed tee shirts for all of us. I spotted these on the DIS boards. There are a million pictures posted over there, some more successful than other, and lots of instructions and tips and hints. I had to give it a shot. One of the first things I noted from the boards was that the tie-dye kits you can buy at your local craft store aren't great. They say there's enough dye for 15 shirts or something like that but people were reporting that they were only getting 3 adult tee shirts out of the kit. It's cool that you can buy the kit with a coupon for 40% off but I would have to buy five or so kits because I announced on Facebook that I was doing this and my sister asked if I'd make shirts for her family and one of my friends asked if I'd make them for her family so my grand total of shirts needed became a whopping THIRTEEN!!! DIS people recommended a mail order dye company called Dharma Trading Company for their high quality supplies. I ordered their serious tie-dye kit which comes with: three squeeze bottles Lemon Yellow dye Fuchsia dye Turquoise dye 1 lb. Soda Ash fixative 1 lb. Urea A small bottle of Professional Textile Detergent 50 rubber bands 1 pair rubber gloves 1 dust mask Instructions Additionally, I ordered a jar of black dye and a jar of true red. The cost of everything wasn't too bad- around $40 for my order. The shipping was brutal- $16. I did notice though that the jars of dye powder seem to contain enough powder to mix several batches of dye and the heaviest part of the package was the bag of UREA. There's enough there for many, many batches of dye. The colors that came with the kit are a small 1 ounce bag of the powder. It looks to me like there is enough in the bag to make 2 batches of dye with each. Possibly 3 but I don't know. I was a little intimidated by the powders and all of the warnings that these things are hardcore chemicals and "make sure you mix in a well-ventilated area" and "these substances are known to the State of California to cause cancer" yadda, yadda, yadda. My box arrived yesterday and I couldn't wait to get to mixing. Start with 100% cotton tee shirts. You can use the 50-50 poly cotton ones but according to the Dharma people and the DIS Board people, you won't get colors that are as vibrant. We all lucked out because Old Navy had a sale last week where their cotton tee shirts were $4. That's a pretty good deal. I reminded everyone to buy a size larger than they normally like because cotton shrinks. Above you can see shirts on my carpet. I used my Cricut to cut a large Mickey head and I used it to trace a head onto each shirt. I don't have a photo of the next step but it's pretty easy. Get some dental floss. Yes, dental floss. It doesn't matter if it's mint or cinnamon flavored (that might have actually made it easier since those are colored) but it seems to be better if you use the waxed kind. Additionally, don't use the flat ribbon kind, it will be hard to pull it through the fabric. You want to sew a basting stitch all the way around your Mickey head. Just a simple in-and-out stitch outside the outline you've drawn. I tried to keep my stitches about a quarter inch outside of the outline. Leave a tail hanging at the end where you start sewing, you'll need it later. I was in a little bit of a hurry to get to dyeing so I tied the floss in a knot and washed all of the shirts in warm water with detergent but no fabric softener. You need to get the sizing and stuff they put in the shirts to make them look pretty in the store out of the fabric. You want the fabric to be clean. Dharma says to test and make sure that they'll absorb liquid dropped on them, rather than beading up on the surface. You need the dye to sink in! When the shirts were done in the wash, it's time to wrap them up! I covered my kitchen table with a plastic trash bag that I sliced open. I taped it down on the corners so it wouldn't shift while I was working. Take your damp shirt and put your hand up inside it to separate front from back. Put your hand under the Mickey and pull both ends of the floss so that the Mickey gets all puckered. I used my fingers from behind to push out the shape so the Mickey was all on top and I could sort of see the Mickey shape. Then I wrapped the excess floss around the puckered fabric, just a teeny bit below my stitches. Then I rubber banded tightly over the floss. This is supposed to keep a white outline around your Mickey. Next it's on to the Danish Phase. Danish, like the pastry, not like a person from Denmark. I laid the tee shirt flat on my plastic covered table. The shirt won't lat totally flat with the bunched up Mickey but I tried to make it as flat as I could and arranged the pleats and folds into a pleasant and even pattern (so all the bunches weren't on one side or too uneven in size) and then I twisted. My banded up danishes You use the Mickey like a knob and turn the shirt in one direction until it curls and twirls around itself until it looks like a danish. You slip 3 or four rubber bands around the danish to make wedge shaped sections, kind of like a pie. I was careful to try and keep loose ends, like the ends of sleeves, under a rubber band. Next, the shirts get a bath in a mixture of Soda Ash and water. Soda ash came in my kit but it's essentially the same stuff they sell in your grocery store's laundry aisle in a big yellow box from Arm and Hammer called Washing Soda. You've probably never noticed it, but I swear, it's there. You add a cup of soda ash/washing soda per gallon of warm water. Mix to dissolve and plunk in your danish and let them soak for 15 minutes. Awww! Look! They're going for a swim! Because I had specific color orders for different people and different shirt sizes and types, I had to figure out a way to label the shirts that would hold up to the dye process. I found some scrap pieces of white ribbon from my craft supplies and wrote the initials of the person the shirt is for with a permanent marker and pinned it to the danish. You can see one in the picture above. That soda ash stuff is mildly caustic. Wear your gloves and don't spill it on your furniture. Why bother with this phase? Here's what Dharma says: The Soda Ash pre-soak raises the pH level of the garment or fabric to approximately 10.5. Raising the pH level of the solution that the fabric or garment is soaked in raises the level of negative hydrogen ions in the dyeing environment. The chemical bonding process uses these ions in the reaction. Pre-soaking in Soda Ash fixer solution is what allows the fiber reactive dyes to work at room temperature.In English: it makes the dye stick to the shirt better at room temperature. Even Englisher: it makes it more prettier. While the shirts swim, you get to mix dyes. Here's the part where I was really confused and a little disappointed in Dharma. I wanted a one sheet set of directions on how to mix the dye. All in one place. It seemed like each sheet with the dyes and in my kits referred me to some other place for a different part of the directions. I'm going to simplify it all here. The dye mixing goes like this: First, put a little hot water in a Pyrex measuring cup. Like maybe 1/4 cup and add 1 tablespoon of the UREA pellets and stir until they dissolve. Next, add your dye powder. Dharma has a system based on asterisks that tells you how much dye powder you need to add to get the right pigment. The bags that came with my kit were labelled Lemon Yellow*, Fuschia* and Turquoise*. One asterisk means 4 teaspoons of powder. You add that to the UREA water- they call it pasting it up- mixing it into a paste, which helps to avoid lumps. Then add warm (body temperature) water up to the 1 cup line and mix. Use a funnel to pour the dyes into your squirt bottles. I was also mixing a color they call New Black**, with two asterisks. That means it took 8 teaspoons of dye powder. They also said to add 1 tablespoon of regular salt to the mix for blacks. Apparently black is a tough color to use and get deeply colored in the finished product. Red, they say, is difficult to dissolve and if there are little bits of undissolved dye in your mix, it can cause "freckling" so they suggest you strain your dye through a piece of fabric for the best results. I didn't read carefully enough a strained my red through a fine mesh sieve. I hope the shirts aren't freckled!!! And then I started applying the dye. You tip your danish to the side and start with your Mickey. You've gotta really soak it and make sure the dye seeps down into the cracks and then wrap mickey in a bit of plastic wrap to protect him from the rest of the dyes. You've got to really soak the fabric, pushing the tip of the squeeze bottle down into the folds of the fabric. I did each shirt over a fresh piece of newspaper because they dripped a little bit. To get the traditional tie-dye spiral, you alternate colors on the wedges of your danish. Once you've put all the dye you want to use into your danish, you have to wrap it up in some kind of plastic to keep it moist for 8 to 24 hours. This begins the hardest part of the tie dye process: THE LONG WAITING! I'm a little nervous. I'd read on the DIS boards that you have to use more dye than you think you need. It's hard to get the dye to sink into all those wrinkles and folds. Mine were DRIPPING. When I put them into the bags, I was worried that my colors were going to pool and leave a big muddy mess on the backs of these shirts. These shirts that are mostly for other people and I've never done this before. I am going crazy wanting to open one up and see how I did! I finished around 1 am so I'm trying to wait until 1 pm to start rinsing and unwrapping. We're going out to lunch and to find the kids some walking sandals to get me out of the house and out of the way of temptation. Prince Charming has a knack for taking photos of me at the most unflattering angle possible. Here's the steps I have left to do: The rinse and initial wash is apparently one of the most important steps to avoid "muddy" tie-dyes. Dharma says to use gloves and rinse the garment while it is still tied under cold running water. Then I'm supposed to gradually untie it while still rinsing and get as much dye out as possible. Then the shirts are supposed to immediately be washed with HOT water and this special detergent called Synthrapol or Dharma Professional Textile Detergent, which came in my kit. This special detergent helps get the rest of the excess dye out of the shirts so they won't bleed and run in future washings. They also warn that before washing, don't let the dyed clothing touch anything! See the results at Fit to be Tied, Part 2.
A complete List of Disney World Rides by Park including all the show Attractions to help you plan your Disney World Vacation in Florida.
Can't decide on the best matching family Disney shirts? We’ve done the hard work and found the cutest designs for you. 👕✨ These trendy outfits are perfect for your next Disney adventure, making for adorable photos and helping you keep track of everyone in the park. Get ready to add an extra sprinkle of pixie dust to your trip! 🌟🏰👨👩👧👦
Money saving tip: Buy shirts souvenirs before you arrive on your Universal Orlando Resort vacation in Orlando, Florida or Hollywood, California.
Pack more fun and print this Essential Walt Disney World Packing List so you don't forget any of the Disney Packing essentials! Plan your perfect Disney World Vacation with these helpful Disney vacation tips.
tips and tricks on making your own DIY Harry Potter Tees - they were a HUGE hit on our Universal Studios trip to Harry Potter World!