- Poster 357
- Clothing 184
- Device 277
- Advertising 283
- Branding 205
- Packaging 215
- T Shirt 128
- Business Card 154
- Outdoor 194
- Sticker 121
- Billboard 138
- Book 78
- Stationery 121
- Box 106
- Sign 127
- Magazine 54
- Storefront 92
- Paper 81
- Cosmetic 88
- Shopping Bag 101
- Can 49
- Flyer 28
- Tote Bag 36
- Display 53
- Frame 40
- Letterhead 41
- Bottle 40
- Wall 54
- Badge 38
- Vinyl 28
- Sans Serif 304
- Calligraphy 46
- Handwriting 274
- Display 442
- Bold 254
- Script 138
- Serif 199
- Retro 113
- Graffiti 58
- Y2K 46
- Elegant 148
- Western 67
- Gothic 58
- Futuristic 74
- Bubble 50
- Playful 125
- Art Deco 50
- Wedding 94
- Sports 51
- Brush 126
- Pixel 82
- Groovy 51
- Signature 84
- Cartoon 85
- Medieval 57
- Typewriter 47
- Blackletter 71
- Marker 73
- Grunge 47
- Monoline 46
Hoodie Mockups
Our hoodie mockups wrap your artwork around real garments — pullovers, zip-ups, and oversized fits — photographed in studio and on the street. They're built for streetwear labels, merch drops, print-on-demand stores, and brand decks where a print needs to look worn and lived-in.
Hoodie mockups for streetwear, merch, and apparel branding
Hoodie mockups let you preview a print, logo, or graphic on a finished garment before a single piece is sewn. Instead of judging artwork as a flat file, you see how it sits across fabric folds, how it reads on the chest or back, and how the colors hold up against cotton texture and studio light.
Our collection covers clean catalog-style shots, moody street scenes, and casual lifestyle setups. The scenes turn a design into ready-to-publish product imagery, whether you're pitching a capsule collection, launching a merch line, or filling a print-on-demand store.
What hoodie mockups are used for
- Previewing screen prints, embroidery, and all-over graphics on a real garment.
- Building product photos for online stores and print-on-demand listings.
- Pitching capsule collections and merch concepts to clients or partners.
- Creating launch content for Instagram, lookbooks, and ad campaigns.
- Testing how a logo reads at chest, back, and sleeve placement.
- Comparing colorways without ordering physical samples.
Types of hoodie mockups
Our hoodie scenes differ by garment cut, styling, and setting, so you can match the mood of the brand you're building.
- Pullover hoodie mockups — the classic front-graphic format for everyday merch.
- Zip-up hoodie mockups — great for split designs, sleeve hits, and back prints.
- On-model hoodie mockups — lifestyle shots that show real fit and movement.
- Flat lay and hanging mockups — clean, catalog-ready presentation.
- Folded hoodie mockups — tactile shots for detail and fabric texture.
Why use hoodie mockups
A hoodie shown on fabric, on a body, and in context communicates fit, scale, and attitude in a way a flat graphic never can. That makes the design easier to approve internally and far more convincing to a buyer scrolling past.
For brands, mockups cut the cost and wait of sample production. For independent creators, they're the fastest route from finished artwork to a store-ready product shot.
Best use cases for hoodie mockups
- Streetwear and fashion brand launches.
- Band, artist, and creator merch.
- Print-on-demand and dropshipping stores.
- Corporate and event apparel.
- Crowdfunding and pre-order campaigns.
- Portfolio and client presentations.
Product listings, lookbooks, social media launches, ad creatives, client pitches, and portfolio shots — anywhere a design needs to look like a finished garment.
Yes. Our mockups are made for professional use, including brand presentations, paid listings, and client deliverables — check each product's license for resale and end-product limits.
All our mockups are built around Smart Object layers, so you drop your artwork in once and it maps to the garment automatically, with realistic folds and shading preserved.
Yes. The scenes include separate fabric or color layers, letting you recolor the garment to a client's exact palette without re-shooting.
They're typically high-resolution and suitable for web, lookbooks, and large-format presentation. Confirm the exact dimensions on each product page.
They standardize how garment designs are presented across a team, so multiple designers can output consistent, on-brand product visuals from the same source files.