The design, thanks to the ever-lovely Tara:
This is a mock-up; the actual shirts will use that design, but will vary a little. I'm printing them through a small local shop, and they're being wonderfully flexible about everything. There are three types of shirts I can do.
The standard girl-cut T (click here to view the basic shirt) can be printed in black, dark chocolate, dark gray, indigo, midnight navy, plum, or scarlet, and is available in small through 2XL.
A girl-cut T with a shallow V-neck (click here to view the basic shirt) can be printed in dark gray, indigo, plum, or black, and is available in small through 2XL.
The larger girl-cut T (click here to view the basic shirt) can be printed in black, charcoal, dark chocolate brown, dark green, or purple, and is available in small through 4XL.
The unisex T (click here to view the basic shirt) can be printed in black, charcoal, dark chocolate brown, dark green, dark heather gray, navy, or purple, and is available in small through 6XL.
There may be an additional charge for sizes 4XL through 6XL, but it wouldn't be more than a few dollars.
HOW THIS IS GOING TO WORK.
1. If you want to buy a shirt, comment here with:
a) what you want (size, style, color)
b) how many you want
c) your email address
2. For each shirt you're requesting, stuff $20 in a cookie jar somewhere. Why? Because I will not be asking you to pay for your shirt or shirts until we have a sufficiently large number of requests to print. (This is also why we're not doing baby shirts. If twelve people want to ask for them, then we can talk.)
2b. The $20 is inclusive of postage within North America; outside, please indicate that you are willing to pay additional postage.
3. I will add your information to a spreadsheet, and contact you when we have enough requests.
Orders are now closed. I am still contacting people to add them to the spreadsheet. Thanks to everyone who ordered!
April 19 2011, 00:01:27 UTC 6 years ago
April 19 2011, 02:48:01 UTC 6 years ago
Yes, actually it does, thank you.
It thus confirms that a 2XL women's would probably not fit me (sadness) - one of my pet peeves with most of these shirt companies is that kind of sizing difference. If I'm wearing a 1X shirt at things like Penningtons and an XL men's shirt is comfortably loose, I find it annoying that these shirt companies for printed shirts almost all size their shirts to assume that I'm too fat to wear anything but a boxy shirt.
However I see with the unisex link you have also added an option for larger girl-cut shirts, so I shall have to examine those colour options to see what I would choose.
And of course, the 2XL for that larger girl-cut tee would fit fine *rolls eyes at shirt companies*
April 20 2011, 04:17:24 UTC 6 years ago