10 Funny Corgi Butt SVG Files for Mugs and Tees
I’ve been doing sublimation out of my Columbus garage for going on four years now, and I can tell you with zero hesitation that corgi butts sell mugs. That squat little behind — stubby legs, ridiculous fluff, zero apologies — hits some primal funny bone in the buying public that I genuinely did not anticipate when I first loaded a corgi design onto an Orca 11oz. My corgi Nugget (a chunky red-and-white dude who once ate an entire stick of butter off the counter and showed no remorse) inspired the whole angle. I put his likeness on a mug, posted it on Instagram, and had seven DMs asking where to buy within an hour. That was the moment I knew corgi content was its own category.
Everything below is an SVG or PNG I’ve actually run through my Sawgrass SG500 or cut on my Cricut, pressed onto Orca blanks with my HTVRONT auto heat press, and sold on Etsy or at the Columbus farmers market. Prices are real 2026 prices, not “suggested retail” fantasy numbers. The funny angle is baked into all of them — because buyers at craft fairs don’t stop at the cute dog booth, they stop at the booth that makes them laugh out loud and then immediately text their friend who also has a corgi. That’s the sale. That’s the repeat customer. Let’s get into it.
The Chunky Corgi That Turns Every 11oz Mug Into a Morning Laugh

This little corgi has that specific round, self-satisfied look that corgi people recognize immediately — the expression of a dog who knows he’s adorable and fully intends to exploit it. I sublimate this on Orca 11oz white mugs at 385°F for 180 seconds with medium pressure on my HTVRONT auto heat press, and the colors come out clean and saturated every single time. The design sits nicely centered on the mug face without running into the handle seam, which matters more than you’d think when you’re doing a batch of twenty. On the Sawgrass SG500 I print on Beaver Paper sublimation paper, tape with heat-resistant tape, and rotate the mug about 45 seconds through to even the heat. I sell finished 11oz Orca mugs at $16 at the market, $18 on Etsy with flat-rate shipping baked in. The 15oz version goes for $20. Corgi people find this design immediately relatable — that round shape is absolutely Nugget, and every corgi owner thinks I drew their specific dog. That personal recognition is what drives the impulse buy.
Christmas Corgi Puppy That Sells Holiday Mugs Starting in October

Holiday corgi content is a seasonal goldmine and I learned this the hard way by NOT stocking it in October 2024 and watching my competitors at the holiday market clean up while I had generic snowflakes. Never again. This Christmas corgi puppy design drops straight onto Orca 11oz mugs as a sublimation PNG at 385°F for 180 seconds and comes out exactly as ridiculous and festive as you want — a tiny corgi in full Christmas enthusiasm, which is to say maximum chaos. On Vapor Apparel poly tees it sublimates at 400°F for 50 seconds with firm pressure on my HTVRONT, and the white background disappears cleanly into the fabric. I size the tee graphic at 9 inches wide and it lands right in the chest-center sweet spot. Finished holiday mugs go for $18 at the Columbus craft market, $21 on Etsy. The tees move at $26. I start listing these in early October and run out by December 15 every year — batch your holiday inventory early because shipping timelines kill late orders.
Corgi Money Holder That Corgi Owners Actually Give as Gifts

Okay, I’ll be honest — when I first saw a corgi money holder file I thought “who buys this?” and then I cut one for a customer’s dad as a birthday gift and she came back two weeks later with four more orders. Corgi people are a different breed (pun very much intended). This laser-cut SVG is the design I take to markets specifically to catch the “I need something funny and specific” buyer who has already walked past every generic dog booth. I cut it on my Cricut in 3mm basswood-look adhesive-backed sheets and also in clear acrylic for the ones people want to display rather than actually use as wallets. The detail on the corgi silhouette holds up beautifully at Cricut precision settings. I finish them with a matte spray and sell at $12 each, or a set of three for $30 at the booth. On Etsy I move them at $14 with free shipping on orders over $25, which naturally bundles them with a mug. These also make exceptional stocking stuffers that photograph extremely well on Pinterest, which drives actual Etsy traffic.
Ramen-Obsessed Corgi Bundle That Sells to the Foodie Dog Parent

A corgi eating ramen is one of the most specific and therefore most effective humor angles in the dog-product space. It hits at the exact intersection of “millennial food culture” and “dog who will absolutely eat your ramen if you look away for two seconds,” which is a very real threat Nugget has delivered on twice. This SVG bundle is generous — multiple files, multiple poses, sized for shirts, mugs, and sticker kiss-cuts — so I get a lot of mileage per download. For the tee, I cut at 8.5 inches wide on Vapor Apparel for sublimation poly or on Bella+Canvas 3001 for HTV in multicolor Siser EasyWeed layers. Sublimation version goes on my Sawgrass SG500 at 400°F for 50 seconds. The mug version I center on an Orca 15oz for that slightly bigger canvas that shows the ramen bowl and corgi detail at full glory. I move the finished mugs at $20, tees at $25. Sticker kiss-cuts on my Cricut at 3 inches go for $4 each or $10 for a set of three, and they sell consistently at every market because they’re the perfect $10 impulse grab.
Pizza Corgi Bundle for the Crowd That Thinks Their Dog Has Taste

Paired with the ramen bundle above, this pizza corgi rounds out a “foodie corgi” section of my shop that has become one of my best-performing Etsy clusters. Buyers who find one usually buy the other — I bundle them as a two-sticker set for $7 on Etsy and the attach rate is around 40 percent. The pizza design in this bundle has that specific wide-eyed “this is mine, I will die for this pizza” energy that corgi owners recognize from personal experience. For sublimation tees on Vapor Apparel, I print at 400°F, 50 seconds, 9 inches wide. On an Orca 11oz the pizza slice detail comes through clearly even at mug scale, which isn’t always guaranteed with complex food illustrations. I check DPI at 300 minimum before printing and this file delivers. Finished tees at $24, mugs at $17. The sticker version kiss-cut on my Cricut in 4-inch format on glossy white vinyl sells at $5 each or $12 for three. I display these at the front of my booth table because the cartoon faces catch eyes from six feet away and pull people in — which is the most important thing any design on your table can do.
Balloon Corgi That Literally Floats Into Buyers’ Hearts

A corgi floating away on a balloon is objectively one of the funniest visual jokes in the dog design space, mostly because it perfectly captures the corgi energy of “short legs, zero aerodynamics, and yet somehow convinced of their own invincibility.” This PNG file sublimates beautifully — the balloon gradient and the dog’s expression both render at full quality through the Sawgrass SG500 at 300 DPI. I use it on both 11oz and 15oz Orca mugs, and the “floating” composition gives me an excuse to wrap the image around the mug more than usual, which looks expensive and deliberate rather than just “slapped on the front.” Press time on Orca mugs with my HTVRONT is 385°F for 175 seconds with the mug wrap tensioned firmly. On Vapor Apparel poly tees I go 400°F for 50 seconds at 9.5 inches wide, centered mid-chest. Finished mugs sell at $17 for 11oz, $21 for 15oz. The tees move at $25. Birthday buyers love this one specifically because “floating away” reads as whimsical gift energy without being aggressive or snarky, which means it crosses the taste line for buyers who want “cute-funny” rather than “sarcastic-funny.”
Classic Cute Corgi That Anchors Your Whole Breed-Specific Shop Section

Every corgi section needs a foundational design — one that doesn’t try to be clever, just nails the breed so perfectly that corgi owners stop mid-scroll and say “that IS my dog.” This is that file. The embroidery-style linework means it works equally well as an HTV cut on Bella+Canvas 3001 tees (I cut at 8 inches wide in black Siser EasyWeed for the clean look) and as a sublimation centerpiece on white Orca 15oz mugs at 385°F for 180 seconds. The detail in the ears and the slightly dopey-happy expression is what makes this one — it’s accurate enough to the breed that corgi people feel seen without being so hyper-realistic that it starts feeling generic. I’ve run this through my Cricut for HTV and my Sawgrass SG500 for sublimation and both outputs look retail-quality. I sell the HTV tees at $22 on Bella+Canvas, the sublimation mugs at $18 for 11oz and $21 for 15oz. It’s a quiet workhorse design that doesn’t sell out in a flash but moves steadily every single weekend because “classic cute corgi” is an evergreen search that never goes cold.
The Actual Corgi Butt Sticker That Started This Whole Obsession

Here it is. The one. The reason this article exists. A corgi butt sticker cut file is arguably the single most profitable low-cost item I have ever put on my Cricut cutting mat. The design is exactly what it says — a corgi butt, fluffy tail, stubby legs dangling — and it is absolutely, unconditionally hilarious to approximately 100 percent of people who see it at my booth. I cut these on Oracal 651 permanent adhesive vinyl in white at 4 inches, on holographic chrome vinyl for the premium version at 5 inches, and occasionally in matte black for the “subtle” crowd (there is no subtle corgi butt but some people try). On my Cricut the cut takes under two minutes, kiss-cut for easy peel. I sell them at $5 plain or $8 holographic, and people buy two or three at a time for their cars, water bottles, and laptop lids. The car sticker version in white Oracal 651 outsells almost everything else at my outdoor markets because the display piece — a sticker on the back of my own car in the parking lot — does the selling before buyers even reach my table. Nugget has approved this design by sitting on it twice while I was trying to weed.
Six-Pose Cartoon Corgi With Enough Variety to Build a Full Collection

When I find a corgi cartoon file with multiple poses or expressions I treat it like gold, because it means one purchase builds out multiple SKUs in my shop. This cartoon corgi gives me enough variations to run separate Etsy listings for “happy corgi mug,” “zoomie corgi tee,” and “corgi sticker pack” without overlapping the designs. The cartoon style is chunky and high-contrast, which is exactly what you want for sublimation — at 300 DPI through the Sawgrass SG500, every pose reads clearly even on an Orca 11oz at full press temperature of 385°F for 180 seconds. For tees on Vapor Apparel I pick the most dynamic pose, size it at 9 inches, and press at 400°F for 50 seconds. The sticker versions I cut at 3 to 4 inches on my Cricut in glossy white vinyl for the bright color payoff. Finished mugs move at $16 to $18 depending on size. Tees at $24. The four-sticker set version on Etsy lists at $11 and has a cart abandonment rate under 8 percent, which is the best of any sticker listing I run. Cartoon-style corgi hits a wide age range — kids, young adults, retirees — which makes it one of the most versatile files in my whole library.
Business Corgi in a Tie That Sells to Everyone Who Works From Home

A corgi in a tie is one of those designs where the humor is entirely in the absurdity of the formal accessory on a creature that is, by design, incapable of professionalism. This is my “work from home crowd” design — the person whose corgi is on every Zoom call, who has a photo of their dog on their desk, and who would absolutely give their boss a mug featuring a suited corgi and feel no regret about it. I sublimate this on Orca 15oz mugs for the office-gift angle — bigger mug, more desk presence, more likely to be seen and commented on in the breakroom. Press settings: 385°F, 180 seconds, medium-firm pressure with my HTVRONT. The tie detail on the file is crisp at this press temp and doesn’t bleed even on the lighter grey mugs. I also cut it at 8 inches for Vapor Apparel poly tee sublimation at 400°F for 50 seconds, which sells as the “remote work uniform” joke that the WFH crowd eats up. Finished 15oz mugs at $21, tees at $26. This is the newest file in my rotation as of 2026 and it’s already in my top five performers for Etsy saves, which is the leading indicator I watch before mugs-sold numbers catch up.
If I had to pick three to start with today, I’d grab the Corgi Butt SVG Car Sticker first (always, non-negotiable — put one on your own car and let it do your marketing for free), then the Corgi Eating Ramen Bundle for the food-humor tee and sticker combo that sells to the widest age range, and then the Business Corgi with Tie for the Orca 15oz office mug that commands a $21 price point without anyone questioning it. Batch a round of all three on a Saturday morning, photograph them on a white table with good window light, and get them listed that afternoon. Corgi content has a discovery advantage on Etsy right now because the breed searches are high-intent and the competition is still thinner than golden retriever or lab — which means a well-photographed, actually-funny corgi product gets found faster. Nugget has been reminding me of this fact by sitting directly on my printer every single time I try to work, so I figure I owe him at least one good article.
More Pet SVG Guides
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Frequently Asked Questions
What projects are Funny Corgi Butt files best suited for?
Funny Corgi Butt files are built for Cricut and Silhouette projects like shirts, tumblers, tote bags, signs and decals, so one design stretches across several products. Most are vector SVGs that scale to any size without losing edge quality, and many come with a matching PNG for sublimation. Skim the product page to see whether the file is single-layer or layered before you plan your color setup.
Is commercial use included with Funny Corgi Butt downloads?
Commercial rights for Funny Corgi Butt 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.
Can I use Funny Corgi Butt designs for sublimation as well as vinyl?
Vector Funny Corgi Butt SVGs cut as solid-color vinyl, and the matching PNG handles full-color sublimation, so one purchase covers both methods. For HTV, mirror the design and cut on the shiny side; for sublimation, print the PNG and press onto poly. Pick the workflow that fits your blank rather than forcing one file type to do both.

