12 French Bulldog SVG Bundles for Cricut Crafters Selling Pet Shirts
I run a small Etsy shop out of my spare bedroom, and Frenchie designs pay my Cricut Maker’s electricity bill. My own dog Pickle (a brindle Frenchie with one folded ear) gets fan mail from customers who recognize him in my shop banner, so I lean hard into this niche. When I started three years ago I tried to be a general “dog mom” store and sold maybe two shirts a month. The week I narrowed to French bulldogs only, I cleared 47 orders. The lesson stuck: pick one breed, go deep, and bundle your designs so each SVG works on a tee, a tumbler, and a tote without redrawing anything.
This list is the exact rotation I use for spring through holiday season. Every bundle below I have personally cut, pressed, or sublimated at least once, and every price I quote is what I actually charge at the Saturday market in my town or list on Etsy. I cut most HTV designs at 3.5 inches wide for adult tees and 2.5 inches for toddler shirts on my Cricut Maker 3 with a fine-point blade and pressure bumped one click. For PNG sublimation files I print on A-Sub paper at 400 dpi and press at 385 F for 55 seconds. If you are new to selling Frenchie merch, work the list top to bottom and you will have a full booth or shop section in a weekend.
Build a Spa-Themed Mug Line Buyers Actually Gift

This is my single best sublimation seller from January through Mother’s Day. The set comes with multiple bath-time Frenchie poses (cucumber eyes, bubble crown, towel turban), and I scatter four of them around an 11 oz Orca mug as a wrap. I print the PNG at full bleed on A-Sub paper, press at 385 F for 55 seconds with my Galaxy convection oven, and the colors come out punchy without any cracking on the handle seam. I charge $19 for a single mug and $34 for a “Spa Day Mom + Daughter” two-pack, which moves constantly at bridal-shower gifting time. I also cut the cleanest pose as HTV in matte white for $22 toddler robes. The line item paid for my second heat press in eight weeks of weekend selling.
Stock Your Everyday Tee Bestseller With One File

This is my workhorse design, the one I cut on auto-pilot every Sunday for the next week’s orders. The Frenchie face is simple enough that the layered SVG cuts clean even on cheap pink HTV from the craft store, but stylized enough that it does not look like clip art. I run it at 3.75 inches wide on adult Bella Canvas 3001 tees in heather peach and heather dust, press for 15 seconds at 305 F, peel hot. My standard listing is $24 plus $4 personalization for the dog’s name in script underneath. I cut around forty of these per month and they outsell everything else two to one. New crafters always ask which file I’d buy first, and this is the honest answer.
Add a Premium Linework Option for Gift-Buyers

I bought this one for laser jobs on my xTool M1, not for HTV, and it has been the surprise of the year. The illustration style has just enough hand-drawn linework to engrave beautifully into bamboo cutting boards and birch ornaments without filling in muddy spots. I engrave the Frenchie at 4 inches tall on a 9×12 bamboo board, add “The [Lastname] Family” in a serif below, and list it at $42 with free shipping. The husband-shopping-for-anniversary crowd buys these by the dozen in early February. I also use the SVG path as a single-color HTV cut on canvas tote bags in bone vinyl, which I price at $26. One file, two product lines, and the linework version reads as “premium” even though my cost is unchanged.
Plug a Quote Bundle Into Your Mug And Tote Listings

Frenchie buyers click on a cute face, but they convert on a funny quote. I drop this lettering bundle into every product line as the “back of the shirt” or “side of the mug” companion. My favorite phrases here are the ones about pillow-stealing and snoring, because every Frenchie owner I have ever met complains about both. I sublimate two quotes side by side on a 15 oz mug and charge $21, or stack one quote under a face design on a $27 canvas tote bag. The PNGs come transparent so there is zero color-matching pain on heather garments. Buyers tell me in messages that they bought because the quote made them laugh, and the dog made them cry. That combo sells.
Cut Multi-Color Vinyl Decals Buyers Slap On Cars

Silhouette sets are how I keep my Saturday booth busy when no one wants to spend $30 on a tee. I cut these poses out of Oracal 651 permanent vinyl on my Silhouette Cameo 4, weed them in batches of twenty during weeknight TV time, and stack them in a clear riser at $7 each or three for $18. The standing pose and the bat-ear face are my two top sellers as car-window decals, and the sitting silhouette goes on every Yeti tumbler that walks by. Total material cost runs about 40 cents per decal once I buy vinyl by the roll, so margin is brutal in a good way. New booth sellers should price these as the impulse buy that pays the table fee while your bigger tees do the heavy lifting.
Own the July Holiday Window With Patriotic Designs

My single biggest revenue week of the year is the seven days before July 4. I start listing this bundle on Etsy around June 1, and the Frenchie-in-a-flag-bandana pose carries the whole month. I sublimate it on white Bella Canvas 3001 tees at 8 inches wide on the chest, press for 60 seconds at 400 F, and charge $26 for adult and $22 for toddler. The bandana print also makes a great $14 koozie if you have a wrap press. Last year I cleared 312 orders between June 20 and July 3 from this one file, and I had to set vacation mode to catch my breath. Buy it in early spring, list early, and Pinterest will do the rest of the work for you.
Stock a 20-Pose PNG Library For a Year of Listings

If you only have time to buy one file this quarter, make it this one. Twenty distinct Frenchie watercolor poses means twenty Etsy listings without any design work on your end, which works out to about ten cents per listing at the regular CF subscription price. I sublimate them on Vapor Apparel tees because the watercolor edges fade so beautifully into the fabric grain. I rotate four poses on the listing photos every two weeks and let Etsy’s algorithm pick the winners. My top three from this set (the heart-eyes pose, the side-tongue-out pose, and the sleepy-curl pose) each crossed 100 orders last year. I price every tee at $27, and the bundle paid for itself inside the first weekend’s sales.
Bundle a Frenchie Mom Tee For Mother’s Day Pre-Orders

The “dog mom” niche is bottomless, and Frenchie moms are the most vocal subset of it. This SVG layers a script “Frenchie Mom” wordmark over a clean breed silhouette, and the layering is already nested correctly in the file, so I send straight to Cricut Design Space and cut. I run it on Siser EasyWeed in soft pink over a Comfort Colors crewneck tee in ivory at 8 inches wide, and it presses cleanly with no edge curl at 305 F for 15 seconds. I list at $32 because Comfort Colors costs more, and the buyers do not blink. I take pre-orders in late March, batch-cut the first week of April, and ship the full Mother’s Day wave by April 25 every year. Reliable money, predictable margin.
Wrap Glass Cans For The Cottagecore Tumbler Crowd

Libbey glass cans replaced Stanley tumblers in my booth basically overnight last summer. This wrap is pre-sized for the 20 oz can, which saves me the math, and I cut it from Cricut clear sticker vinyl on the Maker 3 with the print-then-cut workflow. The wrap is the kind of “iced coffee with my Frenchie” aesthetic that the cottagecore corner of Instagram cannot stop buying. I price the finished can at $24, sell them in pairs at $44, and add a $4 personalization for the dog’s name on the back. Material cost per can comes in around $3.50 once you factor in the glass itself from the wholesale pack. The kitchen aesthetic crowd is the most loyal repeat buyer I have ever found.
Round Out The Easter Basket Filler Lineup

I almost did not buy this one because the season is so short, and I was wrong to hesitate. Easter is a $2,400 month for me purely because of this Frenchie-with-bunny-ears file. I cut HTV on toddler tees at 2.5 inches wide, press for 15 seconds, and list as a $19 toddler tee with a $4 sibling-set discount. I also sublimate the same artwork at 4 inches on the side of an 11 oz pastel mug for a basket-filler price of $16. The cuteness is doing the heavy lifting here, so I do not bother with quotes or wordmarks. I list this design March 1 every year and pull it April 8, which keeps my shop feeling fresh and gives me a four-week burst of new orders before spring weddings start.
If you only buy three from this list, start with the Frenchie Love 20 PNG Bundle for a year of fresh Etsy listings, the Cute French Bulldog SVG Clipart as your everyday tee workhorse, and the 4th of July Dog Clipart Bundle to lock down your July revenue. Add the Frenchie Spa Day set as your sublimation gift line, the Easter SVG for your spring basket-filler push, and the Frenchie Mom SVG for Mother’s Day pre-orders, and you will have a twelve-month calendar on autopilot. The silhouette set is your booth impulse buy, the lettering bundle is your “back of the shirt” filler, the illustration file is your laser premium line, and the Libbey glass wrap is your kitchen aesthetic upsell. That is a full shop from one CF subscription, and that is the entire point of going deep on a single breed.
More Pet SVG Guides
- 10 Dog SVG Bundles for Cricut Sellers Who Actually Move Units
- 10 Blue, Lilac and Merle Frenchie SVG Designs for Color-Variant Sublimation
- 10 Best Paw Print SVG Files for Cricut and Silhouette Crafters
- 12 Labrador Dad SVG Designs for Cricut Shirt Crafters
Frequently Asked Questions
What projects are French Bulldog files best suited for?
You will typically get a layered SVG plus PNG, and often DXF and EPS, which covers cutting machines, sublimation and screen-print workflows. French Bulldog art works on apparel, drinkware, wall decor and gift items. Designs with clean, separated shapes weed faster and hold up better in small sizes, so favor those when you are cutting tiny detail.
Is commercial use included with French Bulldog downloads?
Commercial rights for French Bulldog files vary by seller, so the safe move is to confirm the listing explicitly grants the use you want before you sell. Most allow handmade and small-batch sales of physical goods while forbidding file sharing or POD scaling without an upgrade. When in doubt, buy an extended or commercial license to cover yourself.
Will French Bulldog SVGs work in both Cricut Design Space and Silhouette Studio?
Yes, the SVG format imports into Cricut Design Space directly and into the paid Silhouette Studio Business Edition, while the free Silhouette edition needs the included DXF instead. French Bulldog files keep their proportions when you resize because they are vectors. If a layered design pulls in as one shape, ungroup it to separate the colors.

