12 Corgi SVG Bundles for Cricut Sellers
I’ve been running my Cricut shop out of our spare bedroom in Fort Collins for three years now, and corgis have become the spine of my entire product line. It started because of Pixel and Mochi — my two dogs, a five-year-old red-and-white and a two-year-old tricolor who believes she is the center of the universe — and the fact that every single person at my weekend craft-fair booth wants to know what breed they are before they look at the products. Once I put a corgi shirt on the display hanger, corgi people stopped walking past. They stopped and they bought. That pattern turned into a full corgi category in my Etsy shop, and now corgi SVG and sublimation files are what I keep at the front of my “always-ready” folder on both my Cricut Maker 3 and my Explore 3.
Every design below is something I’ve either already cut, pressed, and sold, or have test-cut and priced for my next run. I’m specific about blanks and machines because that’s the information I actually needed when I was starting out and couldn’t find it. When I say Bella+Canvas 3001 or Comfort Colors 1717, those are the exact blanks in my current inventory. When I quote a retail price, that’s what I charge buyers in 2026 — not a theoretical markup, not some optimistic estimate. My Maker 3 handles my heavier blanks and multi-layer cuts; my Explore 3 is vinyl and decals all day. Here’s what’s in the folder right now.
Sketch-Style Line Art That Weed-Cuts in Under Two Minutes

Sketch-style designs are my workhorse category because the open line art weeds fast and survives the wash better than dense fills. This one I sublimate onto white 11oz mugs at 385°F for 65 seconds with medium pressure — one of my favorite quick-turnaround products because I can press six mugs while I’m cutting shirts on the Maker 3. I also cut it at 8.5 inches wide in Siser EasyWeed black on Bella+Canvas 3001 blanks in natural and white, which gives that hand-drawn, artisan look that my Fort Collins craft-fair crowd goes absolutely nuts for. Weeding time is under two minutes flat because the sketch lines have breathing room. I sell finished shirts at $22 at the booth and $24 on Etsy with shipping included. The mug moves at $16. Corgi sketch designs also do well as sublimation prints on 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers — the line weight is bold enough to read clearly on the curved surface without blurring.
Patriotic Corgi That Carries Your July 4th Booth Through Summer

I stocked up on red, white, and blue blanks in May this year specifically because I knew I needed a corgi patriotic design that would carry my booth from Memorial Day through Labor Day. This file delivered. The composition is bold enough to read as a statement shirt from ten feet away at an outdoor market, which matters more than people realize when you’re competing with seventeen other vendors. I sublimate this onto white Comfort Colors 1717 tees at 400°F for 50 seconds with my heat press — the 100% cotton sublimation-compatible version, not the standard blend — and the colors come out flag-crisp. I also run it on 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers as a wraparound print. Shirts sell at $26 at the booth during July and $28 on Etsy. Tumblers at $27. After the Fourth of July weekend my Etsy shop had eight corgi patriotic tumbler sales in three days, which was a personal record for a single design in a single weekend.
3D Papercraft File That Turns Into a Premium Gift Box Insert

This is the file that makes my gift packaging stand out at craft fairs and has gotten me into three wholesale accounts with local pet boutiques in Fort Collins. The 3D papercraft corgi cuts beautifully on 65lb cardstock on my Maker 3 — and the Maker is mandatory here, not optional, because the blade pressure and scoring passes are what make the folds crisp. I use ivory or kraft cardstock for a neutral look and score every fold line before assembly. The assembled corgi sits in the bottom of a kraft gift box as a decorative insert for shirt orders, which adds perceived value to my packaging without adding much cost. I sell the packaged corgi shirt gift sets at $35 on Etsy versus $24 for the shirt alone, and the “gift-ready packaging” listing attribute bumps my click-through rate by a meaningful margin. I’ve also cut these in glitter cardstock for Christmas ornaments, which sold out at $8 each at my November market.
Second Sketch Variant That Fills Out Your Corgi Shirt Line

When one sketch design sells well, you need a second variant so buyers who already own your first shirt can come back for something different. That’s exactly how this file fits into my product line. It’s a distinct corgi sketch — different pose, different line weight feel — so it reads as a genuine complement rather than a duplicate. I cut this one at 9 inches on Bella+Canvas 3001 in off-white using Siser EasyWeed in dusty navy, which is a combination my regular customers at the booth have started to ask for by color name. It also sublimates cleanly onto the natural-color Skinny Steel tumblers I stock for fall and winter runs. I price this shirt the same as the first sketch design — $22 booth, $24 Etsy — and list both in a two-shirt bundle at $40, which converts at about 8 percent and keeps the per-order value up. Having two quality sketch files in the same aesthetic family makes both of them easier to photograph as a set.
Bow Template That Turns Blank Headbands Into a $14 Impulse Buy

Accessory add-ons are how I keep my average order value above $30 at the booth without raising my shirt prices, and the corgi bow template is my cleanest example of that strategy working in practice. I cut the bow shape in Siser EasyWeed on blank grosgrain ribbon and on white vinyl for iron-on headbands — both cut in under 60 seconds on my Explore 3. The finished headband with the corgi bow sits in a small basket at the front of my display marked at $14, and the visual of little corgi faces on a hair accessory makes people pick them up without even thinking. Moms at my Fort Collins market buy them for daughters, and corgi-owner adults buy them for themselves with zero embarrassment. I also cut these as iron-on accents for kids’ onesies, which I sell as a set with a matching toddler tee at $32. The template scales cleanly from 2 inches for accessories up to 6 inches for bag patches, so one file covers a full accessory product line.
Vintage Floral Arrangement That Photographs Like a Boutique Product

This is the design I reach for when I want something that looks like it came from a boutique pet shop rather than a craft fair booth. The vintage botanical illustration style — corgi surrounded by a loose floral arrangement — sublimates with a richness that plain vector art can’t match, and it’s become my top-performing Etsy listing photo because the product just looks expensive on a flat-lay. I press it at 385°F for 55 seconds onto Comfort Colors 1717 in dusty rose and moss green, which are the colors my female customers consistently ask about. I price these at $28 because the blank plus the aesthetic justify a slight premium over my basic tee line. I also run the same file on 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers for a matching set listing at $52, and matching-set listings have a 14 percent higher save rate on Etsy in my shop analytics — which means Pinterest traffic feeds back in nicely. Mochi is basically a tricolor version of this illustration and I use her photo next to the product in my listing.
Birthday Sublimation Clipart That Covers Every Party Product in One File

Birthday gifting is a year-round revenue stream that doesn’t need a season to kick in, and this birthday clipart set gives me a full product suite from a single download. The birthday hat and balloon details in the illustration are festive enough that buyers immediately see “birthday gift” without me having to put “birthday” in the product photo — which means I can use the same finished product image across multiple gift-occasion listings. I press the birthday corgi onto white 11oz mugs for $16, onto 15oz mugs for $19, and onto sublimation-ready birthday tees at $24. On my Maker 3 I also use the clipart elements as accents on birthday party favor bags — cut from Siser EasyWeed glitter on matte bags — which I sell in sets of six for $28. The clipart bundle has multiple elements so I can rearrange layouts for mugs versus tees without the designs feeling identical. Birthday corgi mugs get reviewed by buyers at a disproportionately high rate, which does good things for my Etsy search placement.
Cowboy Corgi Country Design for Western Niche Crossover Sales

Fort Collins is close enough to ranch country that my booth regularly gets visited by people wearing Wranglers and cowboy hats, and the western-niche crossover is something I actively court. This cowboy corgi design with the country music reference is the best of both worlds — corgi people buy it, and country music people buy it, and the Venn diagram of those two groups is larger than you’d think. I sublimate at full bleed on Comfort Colors 1717 in faded khaki and ranch tan at 385°F for 55 seconds, then sell at $26 at the booth. The design also lands perfectly on 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers as a wraparound, which I list on Etsy for $28 with “country western tumbler” and “cowboy dog tumbler” in my keywords. On Etsy those keyword clusters have almost no competition relative to generic dog designs, so new listings rank faster. I’ve sold this to customers who had never bought a corgi design before — they came in for the western theme and left with a corgi shirt.
Second Patriotic Design That Doubles Your Red-White-Blue SKU Count

Having two distinct patriotic designs in the same seasonal category is a deliberate strategy I learned after my first summer selling: buyers who want a shirt AND a tumbler for the Fourth of July prefer a coordinated set over two identical designs, but they don’t want exact duplicates. This second American corgi file has a different composition from the first patriotic design — different pose, different flag treatment — so I can list both as a “patriotic corgi set” on Etsy and price the bundle at $48, which is $4 more than two individual items and still feels like a deal. I press the shirt on Bella+Canvas 3001 in white at 385°F for 50 seconds and the tumbler on my 20oz Skinny Steel blanks on the HTVRONT press. The patriotic season for me starts Memorial Day weekend and runs through Labor Day with a late spike around the Fourth — having two files means I never run out of new inventory to photograph and list as I go through those weeks.
Summer Beach Float Design That Sells Through August Without Pushing

This one caught me off guard — I downloaded it expecting a solid performer and it became my top-selling summer design two weeks into June. The beach float corgi illustration is genuinely funny without being aggressive, and the summer vibes palette sublimates with that warm, saturated look that reads beautifully in Etsy listing photos. I press it at full width — 10.5 inches — on Bella+Canvas 3001 in ocean blue and sandstone at 385°F for 55 seconds. On tumblers I use the image as a centered panel rather than a full wrap, which lets the blank color frame the design and gives a more curated feel. I sell the shirt at $26 at the booth and the tumbler at $28 on Etsy. The word “vibes” in the design title is doing SEO work I couldn’t have planned — “summer vibes tumbler” is searched more than I expected and my listing started ranking within a week. I photographed this on Pixel wearing a tiny paper lei, which sounds absurd but that photo has been pinned 40 times.
Puppy Floral Clipart That Anchors Your Spring and Mother’s Day Line

Spring and Mother’s Day are my second-highest revenue window of the year, and this puppy floral clipart is the file I build my spring launch around. The soft watercolor-style florals surrounding the corgi puppy read as premium gift material — not a mass-produced design, which is the exact perception I’m trying to build for my shop. I sublimate this at full resolution on white Comfort Colors tees, white 11oz mugs, and 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers for a three-piece gift set I list at $62 on Etsy. The matching set listing gets more saves than any individual product in my shop. At my spring craft fair I display all three products together and sell the set at $58 cash. The clipart set includes multiple individual flowers and the corgi separately, so I can use just the pup on small accessories and just the florals as a border on mugs. This versatility means I’m not buying a one-use design — every element earns its place in my workflow across at least three finished products.
Clean Puppy SVG Clipart That Cuts Flawlessly at Decal and Shirt Scale

The last file in my folder is the one I come back to whenever I need a clean, versatile corgi SVG that works at every scale without losing detail. This puppy clipart cuts at 2 inches for vinyl decals on my Explore 3 using Oracal 651 in matte white and matte black — I sell these at $7 each or five for $30 at the booth, and they’re consistent impulse buys because they go on water bottles, laptops, and car windows. At 9 inches on Siser EasyWeed it’s a solid shirt design on Bella+Canvas 3001, no fussing, no design adjustment needed, just clean corgi art that weeds in ninety seconds. I press shirts at 305°F for 15 seconds, firm pressure. Retail price is $22 at the booth, $24 on Etsy. I also use this as an HTV accent on 20oz Skinny Steel tumblers alongside a text layer I build in Cricut Design Space — the hybrid HTV-on-tumbler approach gives a different look from full sublimation and has its own buyer audience. Having a true SVG (not just a PNG) in the folder means I can scale it to anything without rasterizing, which saves me time every single batch run.
If I were starting a corgi Cricut shop from scratch today, I’d prioritize files that work across multiple product types — shirt, tumbler, and mug — before buying anything that only fits one use case. The sketch PNGs and the puppy SVG clipart are the most flexible files in this list because they cut clean at small scale AND sublimate cleanly at large scale, which means one download feeds your vinyl and sublimation lines simultaneously. Build your first three or four listings around the designs that photograph well as a set — the vintage floral, the puppy floral, and the birthday clipart together make a “corgi gifts” shop section that tells a visual story. Then layer in the seasonal designs (patriotic, cowboy, summer beach) as you approach each relevant window, and make sure you have the accessory and decal files in the queue for impulse-buy booth additions. Start with two or three pressed samples in your own size, photograph them with a real dog in the frame if you can swing it, and list with breed-specific Etsy keywords from day one.
More Pet SVG Guides
- 10 Dog SVG Bundles for Cricut Sellers Who Actually Move Units
- 10 Best Paw Print SVG Files for Cricut and Silhouette Crafters
- 10 German Shepherd SVG Files Worth Downloading for Cricut Projects
- 10 Pug Face Outline SVG for Tumbler Crafters
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes a good Corgi design for crafting?
These Corgi designs are vector cut files, meaning they import straight into Cricut Design Space or Silhouette Studio and resize crisply for anything from a pocket logo to a full-back shirt graphic. Layered versions let you assign each color separately for multi-vinyl projects. If you only need a one-color decal, ungroup and hide the layers you do not want.
Am I allowed to use Corgi files for products I sell?
Selling the end product is typically allowed, but never assume it is unlimited. Check whether the license caps the number of items, requires credit, or restricts print-on-demand platforms like Printify. Keeping the file private and only selling the finished Corgi item keeps you safely inside almost every standard license.
Are Corgi files layered for multi-color vinyl projects?
Most Corgi bundles include a layered SVG so each color sits on its own layer for multi-vinyl shirts and decals, plus a flattened PNG for sublimation. Layering lets you cut each HTV color separately and stack them with registration. If you want a single-color look, just weld or flatten the layers before cutting.

