FAQs
Focus wins over breadth. A store built around a specific buyer, such as a gym-goer, a farmer’s market regular, or a college student, can naturally carry duffle bags, totes, and fanny packs because they all serve the same person. Listing every bag type without a unifying theme produces a store that feels like a warehouse rather than a brand.
Yes, because they produce different visual results. DTG works best on natural cotton surfaces and handles bold, graphic designs well. Dye Sublimation covers the entire surface including seams and handles, making it the right choice for all-over print designs with edge-to-edge artwork. If your design is a centered logo or graphic, DTG canvas totes are the faster path to market. If your design wraps the entire bag, dye sub is the only technique that delivers it correctly.
For a specific and growing segment, it is the deciding factor. “Made in USA” buyers actively filter for domestic products and are willing to pay significantly more. The Woven Tote also has a texture and premium feel that photographs differently from standard canvas, which makes it stand out in listing images. Positioning it as a premium, locally-made alternative to mass-produced totes captures buyers who have already decided they do not want the cheapest option.
The design is the entire answer. A trade show tote is a logo on a bag nobody asked for. A custom canvas tote with a design that reflects the buyer’s identity, humor, or community is something they choose to carry. Buyers who carry a tote as a fashion accessory rather than a utility item are not comparing it to free alternatives; they are comparing it to other bags they would actually pay for.
Both work well as gifts when the design does the emotional heavy lifting. A custom lunch bag with an inside joke for a coworker, or a laundry bag with a college student’s name and dorm number, transforms a utility product into something personal. Functional gifts that get used daily have longer visibility than decorative gifts that sit on a shelf, which makes them strong performers in the gifting category.
Yes, and the growth is driven by festival culture, travel, and outdoor activities rather than nostalgia alone. Custom fanny packs sell well to music festival attendees, hikers, and theme park visitors who need hands-free carrying without a full backpack. The buyer is not shopping for a fanny pack in general; they are shopping for one that matches their aesthetic or signals their community, which is exactly where a niche POD design wins.
They serve different buyers. Cosmetic bags target beauty and self-care audiences who want something that feels personal and curated on their vanity or in their travel kit. Accessory pouches are more versatile and appeal to organizers, travelers, and gift buyers who need a functional container for anything from cables to jewelry. If your store targets a beauty or wellness audience, lead with cosmetic bags. If your audience is broader, accessory pouches have more cross-category appeal.
Drawstring bags win on price point and impulse purchase behavior. Backpacks win on perceived value and utility for buyers who need actual storage capacity. For the student market specifically, a custom drawstring bag with a school mascot, a club logo, or a motivational design sells as a secondary bag rather than a primary one. Backpacks require a stronger design and a higher price justification but generate larger average order values when they convert.
The weekender tote buyer is planning a short trip and wants something that looks intentional rather than generic. This buyer skews toward women aged 25 to 45 who travel frequently for work or leisure and treat their bag as part of their travel identity. A well-designed weekender tote positioned as “the bag that fits a weekend without looking like luggage” captures buyers who are already spending on travel accessories and want everything to feel cohesive.
Tote bags are the clear leader. They wear out, get lost, and accumulate in a way that makes buyers return for new designs. Buyers who identify with a niche, whether it is a book club, a plant hobby, or a specific fandom, often own multiple totes and actively collect new ones. A seller who releases new tote designs regularly rather than treating the product as a one-time listing builds a returning customer base that no paid advertising can replicate as efficiently.
Canvas Totes, Backpacks, Duffle Bags, Fanny Packs, and More
Bags are one of the most visible products a customer can carry. Unlike a mug that sits on a desk or a print that hangs on a wall, a tote or backpack travels with its owner and gets seen by everyone around them. That daily visibility is what makes a well-designed bag worth more than its production cost.
The catalog includes canvas totes, drawstring backpacks, weekender totes, duffle bags, fanny packs, lunch bags, laundry bags, cosmetic bags, and accessory pouches. Brands include BAGedge, Liberty Bags, and Q-Tees. Colors range from Natural and White to Black, Navy, Kelly Green, Sage, Sky Blue, Pink, and more. Print techniques are DTG, Dye Sublimation, and Woven. Ships worldwide, connects to Shopify, Etsy, WooCommerce, TikTok Shop, and BigCommerce.
DTG vs. Dye Sublimation: Choosing the Right Technique for Your Design
The print technique determines what your design can actually do on a bag.
DTG works on natural cotton surfaces and handles bold, centered graphics well. Most canvas totes in this catalog use DTG, which makes them the faster path to market for logo-based or graphic-forward designs.
Dye Sublimation covers the entire surface including seams and handles. If your design wraps edge to edge or uses continuous patterns, dye sub is the only technique that delivers it correctly. All-over print totes, backpacks, duffle bags, and drawstring bags use this method.
The Woven Tote is a separate category entirely. USA-made, premium texture, and a look that photographs differently from standard canvas. It targets buyers who have already decided they want something better than mass-produced, and it prices accordingly.
BAGedge, Liberty Bags, and Q-Tees: What the Brand Difference Means on Etsy and Shopify
Brand names matter more in bags than in most POD categories because buyers searching on Etsy or Shopify sometimes filter by material quality and construction. BAGedge BE007 is a 13-color cotton canvas tote with broad appeal and strong listing photo potential. BAGedge BE055 is a grocery-format tote in 4 colors that targets the sustainable shopping audience. Liberty Bags 8860 comes in 9 colors including Natural, Navy, Red, and Royal, making it one of the more versatile options for color-matched branding. Q-Tees QTB is the economical entry point in 3 colors, useful for testing designs before committing to a higher-margin product.
Fanny Packs, Weekender Totes, and Cosmetic Bags: Niche Products with Real Demand
Fanny packs sell to festival-goers, hikers, and theme park visitors who need hands-free carrying. The buyer is not shopping for a fanny pack in general; they want one that matches their aesthetic or signals their community.
Weekender totes target frequent travelers who want something that looks intentional rather than generic. The positioning that converts is “fits a weekend without looking like luggage,” not just “large tote bag.”
Cosmetic bags work for beauty and self-care audiences. Accessory pouches in 4 sizes have broader appeal across travelers, organizers, and gift buyers. They serve different people, and listing both makes sense if your store has the audience for each.
Tote Bags Have the Strongest Repeat Purchase Rate in This Category
Totes wear out, get lost, and accumulate. Buyers who identify with a niche, whether it is a book club, a plant hobby, or a specific fandom, often own several and actively look for new designs. A seller who releases new tote designs regularly builds a returning customer base that paid advertising cannot replicate as efficiently.
The rest of the bag catalog supports that core. Drawstring bags as lower-priced entry products, backpacks for higher average order values, duffle bags for the travel and gym audience. The store that works is built around one buyer type, not around listing every bag format available.


















