Services

Four decoration methods, each built for different kinds of projects. Here's what we do, how it works, and when each one makes sense.

Custom Embroidery

Everything we embroider is stitched in our studio on commercial equipment. We handle the digitizing, production, and quality checks ourselves.

What it is

Thread stitched directly into the garment. It holds up to washing, wearing, and general abuse — and it looks sharp doing it.

We stitch everything in-house on commercial machines. Whether it's one jacket or 200 polos, we set the design up properly, proof it before we start, and make sure it looks right when it's done.

Best for: logos, names, monograms, and simple graphics.
Not ideal for: very fine detail or smooth gradients.
Common use: uniforms, hats, polos, jackets, gifts, and personal pieces.

What we embroider

  • Hats, caps, and beanies
  • Jackets, hoodies, and sweatshirts
  • Polos, button-ups, and workwear
  • Bags, totes, and accessories
  • Custom patches and specialty items

Who it’s for

  • Individuals and gift projects
  • Local businesses
  • Schools, teams, and clubs
  • Designers and boutiques

Why embroidery

  • Lasts longer than any print method
  • Looks clean and professional
  • Holds up to regular wear and washing
  • Great for logos, uniforms, and branding
  • Same result whether it's 5 pieces or 500

Our process

  1. Review + recommendations
  2. Proof + approval
  3. In-house production + quality control
  4. Pickup or delivery

Good to know

  • Works best on structured or mid-weight garments.
  • We'll recommend thread colors and placement before anything gets stitched.
  • For repeat orders, we save your setup so everything matches every time.

Chainstitch Embroidery

Hand-guided stitching with texture you can actually feel. Every piece comes out a little different — that's the whole point.

What it is

A raised, looping stitch done on a hand-guided machine. It's not meant to be perfect — it's meant to have character.

This is the method you pick when you want people to notice the stitching itself. Works best on denim, canvas, varsity jackets — anything with some weight to it.

Best for: names, script, simple symbols.
Not ideal for: detailed logos or tiny text.
Typical projects: single pieces or small runs.

What we chainstitch

  • Names and personalization
  • Script and cursive lettering
  • Jackets, denim, and varsity pieces
  • Hats and headwear
  • Simple graphics and symbols

Who it’s for

  • Individuals and one-of-one projects
  • Designers and creatives
  • Small brands and studios
  • Anyone who wants something that looks handmade — because it is

Why chainstitch

  • Raised stitch with real depth and texture
  • Hand-guided, not machine-programmed
  • No two pieces come out exactly the same
  • Vintage and workwear feel
  • Perfect for statement details

Our process

  1. Design + placement review
  2. Test stitching + adjustments
  3. In-house chainstitching
  4. Pickup or delivery

Good to know

  • Works best on heavier fabrics — denim, canvas, wool.
  • We'll confirm thread color and placement before anything gets stitched.
  • Takes a bit longer than standard embroidery since it's hands-on work.

Screen Printing

The go-to for bigger runs. Price per piece drops as quantity goes up, and the print holds up wash after wash.

What it is

Ink pushed through a mesh screen, one color at a time. It's been around forever because it works.

Each color needs its own screen, so there's setup involved — which is why it makes the most sense at higher quantities. Simple designs with a few solid colors are where screen printing really shines.

Best for: tees, sweatshirts, simple 1–3 color designs.
Minimums: typically apply due to screen setup.
Not ideal for: complex gradients or photo-style artwork.

What we screen print

  • T-shirts and sweatshirts
  • Team and school apparel
  • Event and fundraiser shirts
  • Workwear and uniforms
  • Promotional apparel

Who it’s for

  • Schools and athletic programs
  • Teams and clubs
  • Businesses and organizations
  • Events and fundraisers

Why screen printing

  • Durable, wash-resistant prints
  • Looks the same on piece 1 and piece 500
  • Gets cheaper per piece as quantities go up
  • Great for repeat orders
  • That classic screen print feel

Our process

  1. Artwork review + setup
  2. Proof + approval
  3. Production + curing
  4. Pickup or delivery

Good to know

  • Each color needs its own screen, so setup is part of the cost.
  • Minimums vary depending on the design and how we batch production.
  • If you need a small run or your design has a lot of colors, DTF is probably a better fit.

Full-Color Printing (DTF)

Full-color prints without the screen setup. Great for detailed designs, small batches, or when you just need it done faster.

What it is

Your artwork gets printed onto a film transfer, then heat-pressed onto the garment. Unlimited colors, no extra setup per color.

DTF is the move when your design has a lot of color, fine detail, or you're doing a smaller run where screen printing doesn't make sense. We work with a trusted print partner for the transfers, then press and inspect everything ourselves.

Best for: full-color logos, gradients, illustrations, small runs.
Feel: slightly flatter than screen printing.
Great when: you want color + flexibility without screens.

What we print

  • Full-color graphics and illustrations
  • Detailed logos and artwork
  • Small batch and one-off designs
  • Mixed garment orders
  • Light or dark fabrics

Who it’s for

  • Small brands and designers
  • Quick-turn business needs
  • Event organizers
  • Teams with smaller runs
  • Individuals with custom artwork

Why DTF

  • As many colors as you want
  • Way less setup than screen printing
  • Works on most fabric types
  • Makes sense for smaller runs
  • Quick turnaround

Our process

  1. Artwork review + prep
  2. Transfers printed by our partner
  3. We press and apply in-house
  4. Final inspection + delivery

Good to know

  • Holds up well — we'll share care instructions so it stays that way.
  • Great for artwork that's too detailed for screen printing.
  • If you want that classic screen print ink feel, this isn't the method — go with screen print.

Ready to get started?

Tell us what you need — the item, how many, where you want the design, and your artwork if you have it. We'll get back to you with pricing and a timeline.

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