Here are a few things to keep in mind when ordering from us:

We have a 12 piece minimum for any order.

We do not charge set up fees.

The price that we give you includes all of our labor and material fees. If you live in California, you are also responsible for California sales tax.

We do not print on customer-provided garments. Though we strive for perfection, sometimes we mess up, and we would feel really awful if we ruined one of your garments.

Our standard prices include your choice of Gildan, Port & Company or Hanes t-shirts, however we can get pretty much any garment you are looking for. Prices will vary based on the cost of the garment.

"Quality in, quality out." That's what my mother always said. It applied to milking chickens back then (don't ask), and it applies to screenprinting now. If you want your printed shirts to be high-quality, we need high-quality artwork to start with.

First, let's get this out of the way: chances are, if you found it with Google Image Search, it's not high-quality.


Here are the file formats we like, in order from most to least awesome:

Adobe Illustrator (.ai) - This is our favorite. Nice, clean vector files make for *great* printed shirts. Make sure you convert your fonts to outlines, though! Also, convert your colors to spot colors.

Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) - Almost as good as Illustrator, but not quite as editable most of the time, in case there's any work to be done.

Adobe Photoshop (.psd) - High-resolution (at least 300dpi) Photoshop files work pretty darn well for printing, too.

Other formats (.jpg, .tiff, .bmp) - All work reasonably well, as long as the resolution is high enough, and the quality is set to 100 (on JPGs).

The maximum number of colors we can print per design is six.

When printing on a dark shirt, a white underbase is usually required, which counts as one color.

Remember: a chain is only as strong as its weakest link. If any part of your artwork is low-quality, the whole thing will look kinda lame.