Probably because as the original post indicated, the discussion was about polo shirts and cafe press only does tshirts/hats/shorts. Not that a nice tshirt would be to bad either though.
My bad. I thought cafepress supported that. I would have sworn I had seen it there in the past.
Josh
CafePress.com actually *DOES* do polo shirts (i've gotten a few from them in the past) but they're fairly low quality. the imagery goes away after probably five washes (or they degrade so much you can see the actual iron-on pattern!)
The polos I get for Chan's ATA Leadership and Black Belt Academy come from KICKS! Explosive Sports Wear in Beatrice, Nebraska (or is it Crete? I forget..)
I highly recommend finding a print shop in town that does polos and get them there. Cheaper and better quality than going to some cheap-arse place like Cafepress. :)
They're good for a few things (Tshirts, mugs, mousepads, that kind of thing) but polos? They suck :) -- Joe Brouhard Certified Trainer Demo Team Captain 1st Degree Black Belt Recommended Chan's ATA Leadership and Black Belt Academy [email protected]
Quoting Josh Charles [email protected]:
Probably because as the original post indicated, the discussion was about
polo
shirts and cafe press only does tshirts/hats/shorts. Not that a nice
tshirt
would be to bad either though.
My bad. I thought cafepress supported that. I would have sworn I had seen it there in the past.
Josh _______________________________________________ Kclug mailing list [email protected] http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
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Joe Brouhard wrote:
CafePress.com actually *DOES* do polo shirts (i've gotten a few from them in the past) but they're fairly low quality. the imagery goes away after probably five washes (or they degrade so much you can see the actual iron-on pattern!)
The polos I get for Chan's ATA Leadership and Black Belt Academy come from KICKS! Explosive Sports Wear in Beatrice, Nebraska (or is it Crete? I forget..)
I highly recommend finding a print shop in town that does polos and get them there. Cheaper and better quality than going to some cheap-arse place like Cafepress. :)
They're good for a few things (Tshirts, mugs, mousepads, that kind of thing) but polos? They suck :)
I thinking about embroidered logos on the polos.
- -- I digitally sign my emails. If you see an attachment with .asc, then that means your email client doesn't support PGP digital signatures. http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/documentation/faqs.html#q1.1
Ah. kewl. I much like those better :) -- Joe Brouhard Certified Trainer Demo Team Captain 1st Degree Black Belt Recommended Chan's ATA Leadership and Black Belt Academy [email protected]
Quoting Chris Bier [email protected]:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
Joe Brouhard wrote:
CafePress.com actually *DOES* do polo shirts (i've gotten a few from them
in the
past) but they're fairly low quality. the imagery goes away after probably
five
washes (or they degrade so much you can see the actual iron-on pattern!)
The polos I get for Chan's ATA Leadership and Black Belt Academy come from KICKS! Explosive Sports Wear in Beatrice, Nebraska (or is it Crete? I forget..)
I highly recommend finding a print shop in town that does polos and get
them
there. Cheaper and better quality than going to some cheap-arse place like Cafepress. :)
They're good for a few things (Tshirts, mugs, mousepads, that kind of
thing) but
polos? They suck :)
I thinking about embroidered logos on the polos.
I digitally sign my emails. If you see an attachment with .asc, then that means your email client doesn't support PGP digital signatures. http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/documentation/faqs.html#q1.1 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org
iD8DBQFDIeF6E5xXU3JS1mQRAgqVAKDNeAABkOqT+qaveWia5Hwx5tr94QCgsiI6 XJaNYrH6htEd4mEVOTrD40g= =TO1t -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Kclug mailing list [email protected] http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
On 9/9/05, Chris Bier [email protected] wrote:
I thinking about embroidered logos on the polos.
That's what I was discussing with the Becks. I've got a large enough graphic (home.kc.rr.com/mharder/tux14.jpghttp://home.kc.rr.com/mharder/tux14.jpg) available to size down, or can re-run from the pov-ray source to whatever resolution anyone could need.
I have a friend who runs a computerized embroidery operation from his house. He's done Polo shirts, jackets, and hats for me. He does very good work. I'm not sure what he would need to create the Penguin logo for us. Those machines use special formats. He can convert into those formats, but I'd have to contact him to find out what he would need from us. I'll ask him about it when I see him Sunday.
Brian JD
--- "Monty J. Harder" [email protected] wrote:
On 9/9/05, Chris Bier [email protected] wrote:
I thinking about embroidered logos on the polos.
That's what I was discussing with the Becks. I've got a large enough graphic
(home.kc.rr.com/mharder/tux14.jpghttp://home.kc.rr.com/mharder/tux14.jpg)
available to size down, or can re-run from the pov-ray source to whatever resolution anyone could need.
Kclug mailing list [email protected] http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
I have a friend who runs a computerized embroidery operation from his house. He's done Polo shirts, jackets, and hats for me. He does very good work. I'm not sure what he would need to create the Penguin logo for us. Those machines use special formats. He can convert into those formats, but I'd have to contact him to find out what he would need from us. I'll ask him about it when I see him Sunday.
My grandparents run a embroidery/garmet embellishment business out in California. They have a special application that when you open an image file, you can draw/trace stitch patterns on top of it. He called the process "digitizing." I created my own /. polo that way. ;) I'm guessing the file format is proprietary to the embroidery machine and it's associated computer application, but probably just contains the coordinates for each stitch, changing to a different color thread, etc.
Jeremy
I talked with my friend Sunday and he said that he can make the polos for $15-$20 with $20 being for the better polo shirts. He can take an image from us (he prefers jpeg), and convert it to his needs. The images used by the embroidery machines break the image into threads and stitches, obviously.
His price is all-inclusive.
--- Jeremy Turner [email protected] wrote:
I have a friend who runs a computerized embroidery operation from his house. He's done Polo shirts, jackets, and hats for me. He does very good work. ...
My grandparents run a embroidery/garmet embellishment business out in California. They have a special application that when you open an image file, you can draw/trace stitch patterns on top of it. He called the process "digitizing." I created my own /. polo that way. ;) I'm guessing the file format is proprietary to the embroidery machine and it's associated computer application, but probably just contains the coordinates for each stitch, changing to a different color thread, etc.
On Monday 12 September 2005 17:02, Jack wrote:
I talked with my friend Sunday and he said that he can make the polos for $15-$20 with $20 being for the better polo shirts. He can take an image from us (he prefers jpeg), and convert it to his needs. The images used by the embroidery machines break the image into threads and stitches, obviously.
His price is all-inclusive.
As a non-paying member I vote for this. If it counts. Might even invest in some extra for ITEC.
Slice me off one of those -- XXL and either blue or ash color. Red maybe in a pinch.
Gary Hildebrand St. Joseph, MO
I think Tux's flipper sticks out too far past the handle of the branding iron. Can we pull it back a little?
On 9/10/05, Monty J. Harder [email protected] wrote:
That's what I was discussing with the Becks. I've got a large enough graphic (home.kc.rr.com/mharder/tux14.jpg) available to size down, or can re-run from the pov-ray source to whatever resolution anyone could need.