There is not one standard shirt ironing style for military shirts due to the fact that every military in the world has different traditions and styles which are unique to that specific military.
Iron is to shirt as steam is to pants.
To iron a polo shirt, lay it flat and iron the front. If the sleeves are long, lay them flat on the ironing board on each side of the torso of the shirt and iron them. Then, flip the shirt over and iron the back.
The iron is hotter than the shirt Heat flows easily from higher temperature to lower temperature region. Iron is at high temperature and shirt is at lower temperature.
The iron is hotter than the shirt Heat flows easily from higher temperature to lower temperature region. Iron is at high temperature and shirt is at lower temperature.
The iron is hotter than the shirt Heat flows easily from higher temperature to lower temperature region. Iron is at high temperature and shirt is at lower temperature.
The iron is hotter than the shirt Heat flows easily from higher temperature to lower temperature region. Iron is at high temperature and shirt is at lower temperature.
The iron is hotter than the shirt Heat flows easily from higher temperature to lower temperature region. Iron is at high temperature and shirt is at lower temperature.
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Place the print face down on an ironing board, place the t-shirt over it, and iron through the t-shirt with a hot (not warm) iron. Do not iron the print directly - or you will melt it.
Try turning the shirt inside out and then spritzing the starch on the inside when the shirt is damp. Then, turn the shirt right side out and iron until it's dry. Be very careful not to iron over the seam on the reverse side of sleeves and try to use a sleeve pressing table that's designed for sleeves. If that doesn't work, or the fabric is too thick to create a deep crease, you may have to have it dry cleaned and pressed with the professional equipment they have available.
The Hawaiian word for shirt is "kāmaʻa" or "kamale" depending on the style of shirt.