{"title":"How to Cut SVG Files with Cricut (Upload + Cut Tutorial)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/how-to-cut-svg-files-with-cricut","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Colleen Pastoor","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvRher4xQaLu9iQbYSlmIVg","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mlq1cOX1Ljs"},"tldr":"Cut SVG files with your Cricut. Upload to Design Space, fix the layers with Attach, handle PNG and JPEG files, and run the cut on vinyl or cardstock.","totalDurationSeconds":912,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Cricut Maker or Cricut Explore Air 2","12x12 cutting mat (StandardGrip for vinyl, LightGrip for cardstock)","weeding tool kit","transfer tape","scraper tool","laptop or tablet with Cricut Design Space installed"],"materials":["SVG or PNG cut file from Etsy, Creative Fabrica, or Design Bundles","vinyl 12x12 sheet (adhesive or HTV)","cardstock (optional)","blank to apply the design to (t-shirt, mug, notebook, tumbler)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Open Design Space and Start a New Canvas","text":"Go to design.cricut.com in your browser and sign in. Click the green New Project button to open a fresh canvas. The canvas is your workspace, the grid where everything happens before you hit Make It. Down the left edge you'll see the toolbar: Templates, Projects, Images, Text, Shapes, and at the bottom, Upload. That bottom button is where everything in this tutorial happens. You can save a canvas at any time and come back to it later, so don't worry about losing your work as you experiment."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Know Which File Types Design Space Accepts","text":"Three file types matter for cutting: SVG, PNG, and JPEG. An SVG is a scalable vector and the cleanest input - it imports straight into Design Space with no cleanup needed, and it scales to any size without going fuzzy. PNG files can have a transparent background, which means Design Space can pull the design out as a single layer without you erasing anything. JPEG files have a solid background and need the most work - you'll have to erase the background by hand with the Magic Wand. If the seller gives you a choice, take the SVG. If not, PNG is the next best thing."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Click Upload and Pick 'Upload Image'","text":"Click the Upload icon at the bottom of the left toolbar - the small cloud with an arrow inside. You'll land on a page with two big boxes side by side: Upload Image on the left, Upload Pattern on the right. Almost always pick Upload Image. The Upload Pattern path is for filling shapes with a repeating pattern fill, which is a niche use case. Even when you eventually want to use a design as a pattern fill, Colleen still uses Upload Image first and adjusts later. So click the Upload Image button under the picture icon."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Browse to Your SVG File and Insert It","text":"Click Browse and a file picker opens. Navigate to wherever you saved the SVG - usually the Downloads folder if it just came off Etsy. Select the file and click Open. Design Space will load it and show you a preview with a Name field and a Tags field. The name is what shows up in your image library, so use something you'll recognize later - the seller's filename like 'bonus-flowers-09.svg' is fine for one-offs, but for a design you'll reuse, retype it as something like 'mermaid handlettered'. Click Upload, then click the green Insert button on the next screen."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Check the Layers Panel for Multiple Pieces","text":"The design lands on your canvas with resize handles around it. Drag a corner to size it up or down, and use the rotate handle at the top right to spin it. Now look at the Layers panel on the right side of the screen. An SVG looks like one image on the canvas, but in the Layers panel you'll usually see it as three or four or even ten separate elements stacked on top of each other. Each color and each individual shape is its own layer. That matters because in the next step you'll have to deal with what happens when Design Space tries to cut a multi-layer design."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Select Everything and Click Attach","text":"If you click Make It right now with a multi-layer SVG, Design Space will spread the pieces across multiple mats - one mat per color, with each piece shuffled to wherever it fits best. That destroys your layout. To fix it, drag a box around all the pieces on the canvas to select them, or hit Select All in the top toolbar. Then look at the bottom of the Layers panel and click Attach. The pieces lock together as a group. Now when you click Make It, everything stays in the exact arrangement you designed, on a single mat."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Use Attach, Not Weld - Keep Your Design Editable","text":"Right next to Attach in the bottom panel is a button called Weld. Don't confuse them. Weld permanently fuses your pieces into a single shape - you can never go back and resize one leaf separately, or change the color of one petal. Attach holds the layout together but keeps every piece editable. If you later decide to recolor the rose, or scale up just the lettering, you can hit Detach, make the change, and re-Attach. Weld is for when you want overlapping letters to truly merge into one continuous cut path. For 95% of beginner uploads, Attach is the right call."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Handle PNG Files - Choose Simple Image","text":"If your file is a PNG with a transparent background (lots of free hand-lettering downloads come this way), the upload flow is slightly different. You still click Upload Image, browse to the file, and open it. Design Space then asks if the image is Simple, Moderately Complex, or Complex. For a clean PNG with a transparent background, pick Simple Image. You'll see a Select and Erase screen next - skip it, because there's nothing to erase. Click Continue, then choose Save as a Cut Image (not Print Then Cut, unless you actually want it printed in color first). Insert it onto the canvas and it behaves as one single layer, ready to cut."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Handle JPEG Files - Erase the Background with Magic Wand","text":"JPEGs always have a solid background, so this path takes more work. Click Upload Image, pick the file, and choose Moderately Complex or Complex. The Select and Erase screen opens with a Magic Wand tool already active. Click anywhere on the background and Design Space erases all the connected pixels of that color. If little bits remain around the edges, click them too. Hit Preview to see what will actually cut - the outline turns into a solid black silhouette. Toggle between Preview and Erase until the silhouette looks right. Save as a Cut Image and insert. If you want to print the design in color and then cut around it, save as Print Then Cut instead - that's how you get a printed sticker."},{"number":10,"title":"Step 10: Click Make It and Cut","text":"Hit the green Make It button in the top right. The Prepare screen shows you a preview of how the design will land on the mat. If you're cutting vinyl, leave Mirror off. If you're cutting iron-on HTV, toggle Mirror on for every mat - the design needs to flip so the adhesive side ends up facing the right way after pressing. Click Continue, then pick your material from the list (Vinyl, Iron-On, Cardstock, Cricut's recommended setting for the brand you're using). Place a sheet of vinyl on a 12x12 StandardGrip mat, smooth it down, and load the mat into the machine - press the arrow button so it pulls in. The Cricut button starts flashing. Press it and the blade goes to work. When it finishes, unload the mat, weed away the negative vinyl with your weeding tool, lay transfer tape over the design, and stick it on your project."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-31T03:08:55.248Z","published":"2026-05-31T02:57:01.070Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}