You send your logo to a digitizer, excited to see it stitched out, and then you get an email back asking for “the vector file.” You already sent a file. Why isn’t it enough?
This mix up happens all the time in the embroidery world, and it usually comes down to one thing, not understanding what a vector file for embroidery actually needs to look like before it gets anywhere near a digitizing program.
Usually people ask is SVG a vector file? So yes, and so are a few other formats you’ve probably seen floating around. But knowing the name of the format is only half the story. What matters more is whether that file is clean enough to trace, stitch, and turn into something a machine can actually sew. That’s where vector tracing comes into the picture too, and we’ll get into why it matters in a bit.
Let’s clear all of this up, one piece at a time.
Before any digitizing software touches your design, it needs a starting point. That starting point is almost always a vector file, because vectors are built from math, points, lines, and curves, instead of tiny colored squares like a photo.
That matters a lot here. A logo built from clean paths can be resized, cleaned up, and traced without losing sharpness. A blurry JPG can’t. Ask any digitizer who’s had to guess at a fuzzy edge because the client only had low resolution images, and they’ll tell you it’s not a fun job.
Basically, the cleaner your starting vector, the smoother the whole digitizing process goes from there.
Not every vector file looks or behaves the same. Here are the 3 you’ll run into most.
SVG stands for Scalable Vector Graphics, and it’s become the workhorse format for a lot of embroidery work these days. It’s lightweight, text based, and opens in almost anything, from free tools like Inkscape to most advanced digitizing software.
I have gotten SVG files from hobbyists who never touched design software in their life, and they still turned out clean once traced properly. That’s the appeal, SVG doesn’t demand a lot of technical skill to create something usable.
AI (Adobe Illustrator) files are the professional standard. They hold onto every fine detail, custom brushes, layered paths, intricate shapes, the kind of thing that gets lost if you flatten a design down too early.
The tradeoff is that you pretty much need Illustrator, or something close to it, to work with one properly. A lot of experienced digitizers prefer receiving AI files for complex logos, since nothing gets stripped out along the way.
EPS used to be the go to handoff format before SVG became common, and some print shops and older digitizing setups still ask for it by name. It plays well across almost every design program out there.
PDF is a bit trickier. A PDF can be a true vector file, or it can just be a flattened image wearing a PDF wrapper. Always double check before assuming a PDF is stitch ready.
This is the part that confused almost everyone new to digitizing.
A vector file tells software how a shape looks. An embroidery file tells a machine how to physically stitch that shape onto fabric, needle drops, thread trims, color changes, stitch density, all of it.
They are not interchangeable, no matter how similar they might look on screen.
| File Type | What It Stores | Can a Machine Stitch It? |
| SVG, AI, EPS, PDF | Shapes, paths, colors | No |
| DST, PES, EXP | Needle instructions, stitch types, trims | Yes |
A vector file is basically the blueprint. An embroidery file is the actual file the machine follows.
Here’s the answer, digitizing software can open a vector file, but it can’t stitch straight from it without a conversion step in between.
Most digitizing programs only recognize the actual curve and path data inside a vector file. Anything else, like embedded raster images, certain font objects, or shapes not converted to proper paths, usually gets ignored or causes errors on import.
I have opened many SVG files where the client thought everything would come in perfectly, only to find half the design missing because it wasn’t converted to clean paths first. That one step gets skipped more than people realize.
Once a clean vector file makes it into digitizing software, here’s roughly what happens next.
Skip or rush any one of these steps, and the finished embroidery usually shows it, either through gaps, puckering, or a design that just doesn’t sit right on the fabric.
Some vector files make a digitizer’s job easy. Others make it a headache.
Digitizing friendly files usually have:
Files that cause trouble tend to have the opposite. A design auto traced from a blurry scan, for example, can end up with thousands of tiny objects instead of a handful of clean shapes. That kind of file technically counts as a vector, but it’s far from digitizing ready.
These mistakes come up again and again, and most are easy to avoid once you know what to look for.
A little prep work up front saves everyone time down the line.
Start by converting all text to outlines, so fonts don’t shift or disappear on someone else’s computer. Then check that every shape is a proper closed path, not just a rough outline from an auto trace tool. If your design came from a scanned image, redo the vector tracing manually if the auto trace looks messy, since a clean manual trace almost always beats a rushed automatic one.
Save your file in a widely supported format, SVG or AI usually covers most bases, and always keep a copy of your original file in case revisions are needed later.
At the end of the day, the right format depends on where the design came from and where it’s headed.
If you’re working with a hobbyist digitizer or a simpler design, SVG usually covers what you need. For detailed, professional logos with fine paths, an AI file tends to hold up better through the whole digitizing process. And if you’re dealing with an older print shop or an existing svg vs eps debate on which to send, EPS still works fine as a fallback, especially for legacy software setups.
Whichever format you land on, remember the goal is the same either way, a clean, trustworthy vector file that gives your digitizer something solid to actually work with.
No. A vector file stores shapes and paths, while an embroidery file stores stitch instructions for an embroidery machine.
Both work well. SVG is easier for simple designs, while AI holds up better for detailed, professional logos with fine paths.
Not always. Files with stray points, embedded raster images, or live fonts often need cleanup before they’re truly digitizing ready.
Fabric, thread, and stitch density all affect the final look, so a design can shift slightly from screen to stitched fabric even with a clean vector file.
Author BioMatthew DavisSenior Embroidery Digitizer
I’m Matthew Davis, a skilled embroidery digitizer with more than 15 years of practical experience. I specialize in logo digitizing, 3D puff embroidery designs, applique digitizing, custom embroidery digitizing, and working with difficult fabrics. Over the years, I have worked with different fashion brands and production teams worldwide. I always share simple tips and useful techniques to help both beginners and businesses improve their embroidery work.