Cricut Foil Transfer Tool & Transfer Sheet Guide to Foiling Cards, Earrings, and Decorations #cricut #cricutfoiltransfer #tutorial

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Learn all about Cricut Foil Transfer and how you can use it to make beautiful and shiny projects with your Cricut Explore or Cricut Maker cutting machine!

Cricut just introduced a fun new tool and material — the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool and Foil Transfer Sheets! Cricut sent me a Foil Transfer Kit and some extra transfer sheets in advance so I could test it out and tell you all about it! The best thing about the Cricut Foil is how easy it is to use — within minutes of opening the kit I was able to create a beautiful foiled card. I’ve now made a number of different projects with the foil transfer and I’m excited to show you and tell you everything I’ve learned! You’re going to love this!

See the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool in action as I create two different foil projects in this step-by-step tutorial video:

First, let me explain how this works. You just put the special Cricut Foil Transfer Tool into your Explore or Maker, choose or upload a design in Cricut Design Space, change the Linetype to “Foil” (fine tip, medium tip, or bold tip), put your base material on your cutting mat, tape a foil transfer sheet on top of your material, load your mat into your Cricut, and press the flashing button! Then sit back while your Cricut puts the foil on your material.

I love that the Cricut Foil Transfer is pressure-activated, not heat-activated like the Foil Quill, which means NO heat is involved at all. The Cricut presses the special tool presses down onto the foil sheet, transferring the foil onto your base material. No special adapter is needed — the Foil Transfer Tool fits right in Clamp B of your Explore or Maker. So unlike the Foil Quill, you don’t need another power source. Just your Cricut, the tool, and a foil transfer sheet.

The Foil Transfer Kit comes with three differently-sized tips: Fine, Medium, and Bold, as well as 12 small (4″ x 6″) foil transfer sheets and tape. I love that there are three different tips, so we can choose the size that works best for our projects. I found I liked the Bold Tip the best, unless my design was particularly small and intricate, and then it was great to have the fine and medium tips.

Here’s a handy chart so you can see how the Cricut Foil Transfer Tips compare:

Cricut Foil Transfer Tips Compared - Fine vs Medium vs Bold #cricutfoiltransfer #foiling

You can transfer the Cricut foil onto a variety of different materials, such as cardstock (light, medium, and heavy), adhesive backed paper, faux leather, foil embossed paper, watercolor paper, pearl paper, vellum, printable vinyl, and Kraft board. The smoother the surface, the smoother your foil transfers. I see many pretty foiled cards, shiny faux leather earrings, and gorgeous Kraft board boxes in our future!

And yes, before you ask, you CAN cut and foil in the same project. The Cricut Foil Transfer Tool is fully integrated with Cricut Design Space, which lets you combine multiple linetypes (draw, score, cut, and foil) all in one project. You can even change the Foil Transfer Tool tip in a single project, combining different sizes. This pretty foil feather card was scored, then foiled, then cut — all in my Cricut!

Black card with silver foil feather made with Cricut Foil Transfer

Another cool thing you can do is use different colors of foil in the same project! Here is a foiled sunflower card I designed using gold and green foil — get this design free in my library (design #242).

@jennifer.makerCricut foil trick! ##cricut ##foil ##cricutmaker ##cricutprojects ##cricutexploreair2 ##fyp ##foryou ##cricut101 ##cricuthacks ##learnfromme ❤️♬ Happy Ukulele – AShamaluevMusic

You can order the Cricut Foil Transfer Kit and Foil Transfer Sheets now over at the Cricut Shop!

This post contains some affiliate links for your convenience (which means if you make a purchase after clicking a link I will earn a small commission but it won’t cost you a penny more)! Read my full disclosure policy.

My Cricut Foil Transfer Tricks & Trips:

  • Be sure to tape down all edges with the provided tape. (Yes, you can re-use the tape.)
  • If your transfer sheet seems to be ripping, use “Less” pressure when you go to make your project. If that’s still not good enough, choose a thinner material setting (i.e., use “light cardstock” instead of “medium cardstock”). I only had this issue on the Maker, which is a higher-pressure machine than the Explores. Note that if you are foiling and cutting at the same time and need to change your pressure back to Default or More for the cut, just pause your machine and you can then change your pressure in Design Space.
  • You can combine different tips (Fine, Medium, and Bold) in the same project.
  • You can foil and cut (or draw or score) in the same project as well!
  • Don’t worry if your foil transfer sheet doesn’t like perfectly flat and smooth — a little tugging at the tape line won’t effect the project.
  • Save your scraps! While you can’t re-use a section of the foil transfer sheets you’ve already used, you can cut out the parts you have not and use them for small projects!
  • Do not let your foil transfer sheet touch your cutting mat — if it does, the foil will come right off onto the adhesive surface of your cutting mat! (Yes, I did it by mistake.)
  • If a little foil transfers somewhere you didn’t want it (it happened to me once in a corner — I think I pressed too hard when taking the tape off), just remove it with an eraser. I used a small dollar store eraser and it came right off for me.
  • You’ll find your base material sticks more to your cutting mat where you applied foil. Just flip your mat over onto your surface and slowly pull it away from you material — go slow and be patient.
  • Store your tips on the magnet bar in your Cricut’s storage compartment to keep them from getting lost!

Storage compartment on the Cricut cutting machine storing the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool and Tips

Here are helpful answers to questions about Cricut Foil Transfer:

Where do I get the Cricut Foil Transfer Kit or Foil Transfer Sheets?

You can purchase the foil transfer items from the Cricut store as well as from craft stores like Joann. Here are the available products right now:

What’s the difference between the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool and the We R Memory Keeper Foil Quill?

The Cricut Foil Transfer Tool uses pressure, not heat, to transfer the foil. The 3-in-1 tool (housing plus 3 tips) is simpler to use than the Foil Quill’s 3 separate tools with cards, and no extra power is needed to use the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool. Also, the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool can use the special Foil linetype in three different sizes, while the Foil Quill relies on the Draw linetype. One other important thing: the Foil Quill requires you to remove the pen adapter from one clamp in a Cricut machine clamp and use one of their special adapters to make the Foil Quill fit (removing the pen adapter voids the warranty for Cricut machines).

How do the three tips work on the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool?

The tips change easily. To insert a tip, just put it into the end of the housing — a magnet locks it in. When you want to remove the tip, depress the plunger at the top and it’ll come right out. You can tell the difference between the foil transfer tips by the lines — one line is for a fine line, two lines is for a medium line, and three lines is for a bold line.

Tips for the Cricut Foil Transfer Tool

Which side of the transfer sheet goes up?

Be sure to place your foil transfer sheet with the SHINY COLORED side up. On the silver foil transfer sheets, both sides are silver, so put the SHINY side up.

Do I have to tape the foil transfer sheet down? What kind of tape do I use?

Yes. The Foil Transfer Sheet will not adhere to your base material without pressure, so it needs to be taped down. Tape strips are included with Foil Transfer Sheets. If you run out, use a tape with light adhesive, such as washi tape, painter’s tape, or masking tape. Always test your tape on your base material first to ensure it won’t tear or harm the material when removed.

Do I need cut my foil transfer sheet before taping it down?

If your base material the same size or larger than your foil transfer sheet, then there’s no need to cut the sheet first. But if your foil transfer sheet is larger than your base material, trim it down first. You cannot allow the foil transfer sheet to extend beyond the edges of your base material or it will transfer to your cutting mat.

Will the foil transfer if tape is covering part of the design?

No. Make sure you do not have tape covering any part of your design area. The tape will not allow the foil to transfer properly, plus the simple act of the foil transfer tool crossing over tape could cause the transfer sheet to tear.

Can I use the foil transfer sheets more than once?

No. Once the foil is transferred, you cannot transfer anymore. If you hold a used sheet up to the light, you’ll see the foil has completely transferred. But you can trim the unused parts of your foil transfer sheet out and save them for small projects in the future!

Why does my foil transfer sheet rip when I make a project?

There may be several reasons. Here they are in the order you should check:

  • Do you have the right size tip in your Foil Transfer Tool? If you tell your Cricut you’re using the bold tip but actually have the fine tip in, you may have an issue with this.
  • Did you select the right material? If you selected a thicker material than you’re actually using it, you can get tearing. Change your material setting to a lighter material setting.
  • Did you select too much pressure? If you changed your pressure setting to “More,” reduce it. I use “Default” on my Explore and “Less” on my Maker.
  • Is there tape covering any part of your design area? If so, your sheet can tear when the tool goes over the edge of the material. Move the tape so it does not cover your design area.
  • Is your foil transfer sheet wrinkled? If there are wrinkles or pronounced ripples in the foil, it can rip during transfer.
  • Did you remove the foil transfer sheet before cutting? If you’re doing a  foil transfer and cut in the same project, be sure to remove the foil transfer sheet before you cut, or it will just cut the transfer sheet. Cricut Design Space will prompt you to do this so you don’t forget.

Why are there lines down my transferred foil?

The white star wheels on the roller bar may result in some foil transfer on your mat or material. To avoid this, move the star wheels to one side. (I moved my years ago and have never moved them back.)

Cricut Foil Transfer Tool & Transfer Sheet Guide to Foiling Cards, Earrings, and Decorations #cricut #cricutfoiltransfer #tutorial

Why didn’t my foil transfer smoothly?

If you use a textured base material, like a linen texture, wood grain texture, or pebbled texture, it’s harder for the foil to transfer to it smoothly. The smoother the better!

Can I use my iPad or phone to do Cricut foil transfers?

No, the Foil linetype is only available on Design Space for Desktop, just like the Knife blade. So you won’t be able to choose the Foil linetype on iOS or Android versions, nor will you be able to see foil-specific projects there.

What materials can I use with the Cricut foil transfer sheets?

  • cardstock (light, medium, and heavy)
  • adhesive backed paper
  • faux leather (avoid the pebbled texture)
  • foil embossed paper
  • watercolor paper
  • pearl paper
  • vellum
  • printable vinyl
  • Kraft board

What projects do you have for the Cricut Foil Transfers?

My new Mandala Letters are designed specifically to use with the Cricut Foil Transfer Sheets. This is design #240 in my free resource library.

Framed Silver Foil Mandala Initial - Silver on Blue Paper

My leaf earrings also work great with faux leather and foil transfer sheets!

Gold Cricut Foil Transfer Sheet on Brown Faux Leather with a Wood Grain to make leaf earrings

And, of course, the feather card design I showed in my video:

Purple foil transfer sheet on green cardstock to make a pretty feather card

If you’d like to make the feather card, please watch my video for a full tutorial! The feather card is design #241 in my free resource library.

How to Make the Cricut Foil Feather Card

Black card with silver foil feather made with Cricut Foil Transfer

Foil Feather Card

Yield: 1 card
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Active Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 15 minutes
Difficulty: Easy to Medium
Estimated Cost: $1

Make a beautifully detailed and foiled feather card on your Cricut -- score, foil, and cut in the same project!

Tools

Instructions

STEP 1: GET YOUR CRICUT FOIL TRANSFER TOOLS & SUPPLIES

This project can be done with just the Cricut Foil Transfer Kit and a sheet of 12" x 12" cardstock.

STEP 2: GET MY FEATHER CARD DESIGN FILES

First, download Design #241 which is my feather card SVG/DXF/PNG from my free resource library.

Tip: If you're not sure how to upload an SVG cut file to Cricut Design Space, watch this helpful video training series I made. If you're on an iPhone or iPad, here's how to download and upload SVG files to the Cricut Design Space app.

Upload the SVG to Cricut Design Space and place it on your canvas. It will look like this:

Change the feather layer to "Foil" under Linetype. I chose "Bold."

You can also change the color of the Foil layer to help you visualize how your project will look. Just click the Color box next to the Linetype menu.

Make sure the score line is set to Score as well.

Setting the score layer in Cricut Design Space on the Cricut Foil Transfer Feather Card

You can also change your base material later by selecting it and then clicking on the color menu. I'm changing mine to black so I can see how the silver foil transfer will look on it:

Changing the card color in Cricut Design Space

No matter what you do, be sure to select everything and click Attach — your foil layer must be attached to your base layer (along with your score layer):

Attaching everything together in Cricut Design Space

This is what my foil transfer card looked like in Cricut Design Space before moving on to the next step:

The foil transfer card is all ready to go in Cricut Design Space

STEP 3: TAPE YOUR FOIL TRANSFER SHEET TO YOUR CARDSTOCK

Check your Design Space screen to see exactly where the feather will be on your mat, then place your foil transfer strip in the same spot with plenty of margins. On my screen, the feather appears near the top of the mat between 7" and 9".

Check the placement of your foil transfer design in Cricut Design Space

Positioning a piece of Cricut foil transfer sheet on a piece of cardstock

Tape all four sides of your foil transfer sheet to your cardstock, making sure that the tape will not cover any part of your design.

Taping all four sides of the Cricut foil transfer sheet down with tape

Be careful major wrinkles or folds, but don't worry about slight tugging like this.

Cricut foil transfer sheet taped to a piece of black cardstock with some slight tugging along one side

I found it easiest to apply the tape smoothly if I held down the edges first.

Once your foil transfer sheet is taped, it's time to load your mat into your Cricut to begin the project!

STEP 4: SCORE, FOIL, AND CUT OUT YOUR FOIL FEATHER CARD

Watch the video to see how I did this!!

STEP 5: UNLOAD THE MAT AND FOLD THE CARD

Watch the video to see how I did this!!

When you're all done, admire your work! Black card with silver foil feather made with Cricut Foil Transfer

Recommended Products

As an Amazon Associate and member of other affiliate programs, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Get my free SVG files to make Cricut Foil Transfer projects

I’d love to see your Cricut foil transfer projects! I know you’ll come up with some amazing ideas on how to use this cool material. Please share a photo in our Facebook group or tag me on social media with #jennifermaker.

Love,

JenniferMaker.com

Want to remember this? Save this Cricut Foil Transfer Ultimate Guide tutorial to your favorite Pinterest Board!

Cricut Foil Transfer Tool & Transfer Sheet Guide to Foiling Cards, Earrings, and Decorations #cricut #cricutfoiltransfer #tutorial

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32 Comments

  1. Hi Jennifer,

    Great post (as always)!

    I use metallic vinyl on faux leather for some of my earring projects. Do you think it is worth the cost of buying the tool to switch to foiling?

    Thanks!

    Claire

    I use metallic vinyl on faux leather for some of my earring projects. Do you think it is worth the cost of buying the tool to switch to foiling?

    Thanks!

    Claire

    1. I am a huge believer in using the supplies you have and never buying anything that will be a financial strain. The new tool is very fun to use and I am glad I have it, so if it is something you think you will use, it might be worth buying for your projects.

  2. I have been having trouble with my Cricut foil transfer kit. I did what was supposed to do, put it on custom, then choose my card stock, which was light cardstock. I’m using a Cricut Explore Air 2 btw. You barely see any foil at all. I put the dial on light cardstock, and it does transfer better, but you still barely see anything. I don’t know what it is I’m doing wrong. Could it be that I need paper directly from Cricut? I’m using the 8.5×11 cardstock from Michael’s that they sell in packs of 50. I think it’s Recollections brand. If not then Craft Smart. I’m just getting really frustrated because I really wanted this to work.

  3. I would like to foil on the spine of my Creative Memories scrapbook. I am not sure what the material setting would be used. Any ideas?

    1. Yes, you can absolutely use other brands of transfer tape. Over time, by trial and error, you will find which one you like the best!

  4. This was great information! However, I’m getting a double line around the words I want to foil. How do I get rid of this.

    1. Make sure you are using a “writing” font (it’s a filter you can choose when your are in the font menu). This should help!

  5. Hi Jennifer, Just finished making some of your feather foil cards. I did 2 on a 12×12 sheet of cardstock. A couple of hiccups on placement, but pretty good. Question for you: Did you foil the white paper that says “You got this”?

    The wording I put on my cards just did the outlines. I changed the settings to “writing” and then chose the Bold Foil…..but it just outlined the letters and it doesn’t look good. Any tips to help me out?

    Thanks so much!!

    1. This will look best with a writing font! And you can filter your search on fonts to just writing fonts in Design Space by clicking FONTS, then click FILTER in the upper right and click “writing” font. From there, you can choose any of these fonts and they should look much nicer!

  6. what kind of image can you use the cricut foil transfer on? I like the love heart on your sample sheet showing the tip thickness fine medium and large. do you have them available in your library? ty

  7. Hi Jennifer,

    Thank you for great tutorial! Question, can we foil on acrylic? I saw a video on youtube, but with Foil Quill from we r keepers, not cricut. Thank you!

    1. Hi Kay! I am not sure if you can! See if acrylic is an available material when you are selecting your material.

  8. Hi Jennifer!

    First, you are absolutely amazing! You’re the main reason I can create the things I can on my Cricut! Every time I have a question about something, your blog is the first place I go! Thank you so much for your hard work, it’s appreciated more than you know! I’ve had this foil transfer kit since it came out (it’s sooo amazing!) and I have done a few projects with it, but mostly on card stock. I was just wondering, since you are able to use velum as an option of material, have you tried using acetate? I just got my monthly Cricut mystery box and as soon as I saw the acetate, the foil popped in my head! I know I can play around with the setting and thing, but I know you do a lot of tutorials using different materials for other things, so I figured I’d ask!

    Thank you so much!

    Alli

    1. Hi Alli!

      I just tested the acetate, it did work but the longevity may not last that long. Using my finger nail I was able to easily scratch the foil off. I used, medium cardstock with more pressure as my setting on the Maker. You could certainly try alternate settings like Kraftboard to see if deeper pressure allows for better results.

  9. Hi Jennifer!

    I have a Maker and I’m trying to make my engagement party invitations. I am getting the card part professionally printed by a lab that I know and will be the cheapest option, but the cards will be cut 4×6. I’m testing it out with my printer and I can’t seem to line up the card correctly for the foil because it doesn’t have the black guide line. Do you have any suggestions as how to work with precut cards?

    Thank you!

    Lisa

  10. Hello!

    Iโ€™m wondering how you would go about foiling a precut and printed 4×6 card. I have tested it out my cricut is having a hard time finding the edges because thereโ€™s no black box to guide. Is there a better way to go about it than just a simple guess?

    Thanks!
    Lisa

    1. Hi Lisa! The easiest thing to do is create your design on the same size card in Design Space that you will physically have on your cutting mat. Once you get to the mat preview section, place your design to match what you want to happen on your cutting mat and then you can hide the card layer you created in Design Space and it should come out pretty close.

  11. Hi!
    I love all of the great information you share about Cricut however Iโ€™m not a loyalist. Iโ€™d like to know if any other foils will work with this adapter?
    Thanks for all you do!,
    Robyn

    1. Hi Robyn! Most other foil papers require heat to apply and therefore may not work in the Cricut machine as the Cricut foil paper is based on pressure when applying.

  12. I am having trouble with my designs rubbing off. Is there a way to seal the foil into the faux leather Iโ€™m using?

  13. Hello!

    Would the foil tranfer work on faux suede?

    Looking forward to making some great pronects with this!

  14. I am new to Cricut and have been so excited to make things. What I have painfully (as in expensive) learned is that if you don’t have an apple you can’t do foil or some of the really cool projects with Cricut Access. I’ve been so disappointed and frustrated but I keep trying new things….like the foil….only to realize it is not compatible with my laptop. Will Cricut Access change this? Not everyone can afford the more expensive laptops : (
    I just want to be crafty!

    1. I think you may be a bit confused, Tracy. You can’t do foiling using iOS (iPad or iPhone), but it works swell with most desktops and laptops! Are you a member of our Facebook group? They’d be able to help you out – you can get in touch with them at Cricut Crafters and Makers!

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