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Archive for the 'Industry' Category



my-life-in-t-shirts-aaron-bondaroff-releases-autobiography

My Life in T-Shirts - Aaron Bondaroff releases autobiography

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According to High Snobiety, one of the most important figures in contemporary American t-commerce, Aaron Judah Bondaroff  - a.k.a. A-Ron, a.k.a. the Downtown Don - will publish an autobiography on September 6th.

I love to see the founder of aNYthing - “the only brand that matters” sharing his stories. Already two years ago, the New York Times had a great article on him making his lifestyle a business which should be in the bookmarks of every t-shirt fanatic: you can still read “The Brand Underground” online and check Aaron´s current project “Off Bowery” afterwards in order to kill the days left until the book comes out.

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Measuring your feedback- Findings from the NPS Conference in London

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Short question in advance:

1950 – One in every 30 children died*

2005 – One in 500 every children died*

Do you know why?

*Source: UNICEF

Continue reading ‘Measuring your feedback- Findings from the NPS Conference in London’

spreadshirt-alongside-seesmic

Spreadshirt alongside Seesmic

Here´s a little interview Loic Le Meur from Seesmic conducted with our CEO Jana Eggers. It´s about mass personalisation slash customisation.

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spreadshirt-vs-cafepress-vs-zazzle

Spreadshirt vs. CafePress vs. Zazzle

Alright. While Adam should be on his way to Asia by now, I´ll make a little attempt to get some life into this blog again …Some days ago, Leo from MacMerc - one of our shop partners in the US - compared the services of Spreadshirt, Zazzle and CafePress regarding the quality of print as well as the quality of service. We came in first:

I mentioned at the outset that I use Spreadshirt for my own MacMerc.com merchandise. This is first because of the quality of their products but their customer service is a very close second.

So, we´re happy about that. But we also know that there´s some work left:

I would not, however, recommend either of these [services] for my Mom to make t-shirts for her bridge club—the web sites are far too complicated.

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What did your shirt cost? Name your price t-shirts

The interesting thing about the t-shirt industry is that as competition is high, cost of product and product usp’s are low companies have to find novel ways to ring out remaining value in the product.

Spreadshirt does this by allowing an entirely custom print, for mass produced pricing and our shop platform.

la Fraise takes the contest, crowdsourced approach. It also offers anyone the chance to pick what becomes a product and offers strict limited editions as do many other sites to add extra value to a design.

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T Post offers shirt subscriptions - one shirt, one month, a surprise direct to your mailbox each month.

There are many more, one of which I’ll tell you about below.

Continue reading ‘What did your shirt cost? Name your price t-shirts’

Don’t make me a target

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The BBC had a newstory recently about the possibility of using CCTV to track crime suspects by the branded clothing they wear http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/hooligans/1979909.stm.

“The Metropolitan Police is looking into technology which can automatically identify branded logos on clothing.”

“Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s iPM programme he said, “Many of these young criminals in particular wear distinctive track-suits and coats with logos and sporting emblems and we’re going to use that facility to search, link and identify criminals.”

Here’s the thinking:

1. People that do stuff wrong wear clothes

2. Peoples faces are very difficult to differentiate via CCTV, especially as those committing crime have learnt to obscure them and don’t smile politely at CCTV cameras anymore.

3. So we could narrow them down initially by scanning their clothes and identifying brand marks.

So if a guy in a pink nike shellsuit robs a bank, it will be quicker to search all the cameras in that area first for pink nike shellsuits, then from there you can check them against other details you have about the individual.

I don’t want to get all big brother here, but this scares me a bit. Its best not to think about the amount of times your recorded on camera whilst wondering around central London. You don’t need to think about it, because you’re not doing anything wrong. But what concerns me is what might happen to particular brands which might become associated with crime or anti-social behavior. Football hooliganism is one example, certain brands have become somewhat associated with football hooliganism.

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“There is a fascination among football hooligans with designer labels such as Lacoste, Burberry, Aquascutum and in particular with Italian label Stone Island.”

BBC New Item - “Hooligans Under Cover

In my doomsday head I can imagine at the start, the monitoring is only reactionary. But then should individuals wearing the same brands, repeatedly commit offences it would to make sense to pro-actively monitor for individuals in these brands, in these types of situations before they commit crimes. Then its only a hop, skimp and a mini-jump to lots of wrong time, wrong place, wrong apparel type mistaken arrest type scenarios.

“What they do is they tend to go out in a kind of uniform, if you see a kid in a brand of “hoodie” you can be pretty sure he’ll be wearing that same brand of “hoodie” the next time he commits an offence.”

I hate the idea of wearing something that would automatically label me.

“The intention is we want criminals to fear CCTV so the investment in CCTV is realised - the criminals fear it and the public feel safer,” said DCI Neville.

I wonder how big an issue it is if the public fear CCTV as well.

In a country that seems ever increasingly dominated by a few dozen brands, I’m sort of relived reading this that there are sites like Spreadshirt allowing you to wear brand free, or custom branded clothing. So when you walk down the street your clothes only raise as much of a flag to those around you, or those watching you, as you want them too.

Read the full BBC newstory here

Zazzle office makeover

Of the Graffiti kind

Lets hope we can get something as creatively inspiring as this inside the new Spreadshirt HQ :)

OLP Closed: Voting to begin

OLP closed it’s doors to submissions late on Sunday night. With reports of a submission rate of 5 logos per minute in the closing stages, it has taken a little while to get all the entries approved. In the end there were 2808 logos submitted, and so far 13 entries have made it to the grand final (there may be a few more from the final weeks shortlist, which will be decided today).

But OLP.16 is not over! In the next few days we will release a survey where you will be able to give your opinion on what should be the new Spreadshirt logo. More details to come soon…

Spreadshirt will participate in September’s MiniBar

minibar.gifTomorrow, Spreadshirt UK will present at the September MiniBar, socializing over tech DIY fun and new start up ideas.

MiniBar is a social evening in East London which offers people a chance to snaffle some free beer while discussing p2p, Creative Commons, web applications, social networking and general Web 2.0 (3.0) mayhem & fandango. Larry Ryan will give a presentation on the Spreadshirt concept, and we’ll bring along some shirts, too.

At the MiniBar you can find people who will help you making your next project work. They like to call it “useful fun”. Usually there are 250+ of the finest famousest digerati and tech investors such as Esther Dyson (angel investor in Flickr and delcious), Mark Shuttleworth (Ubuntu), to tech journalists (Guardian, BBC), bloggers (OpenBusiness etc), Open Source developers (Drupal, Ubuntu), web designers, Creative Commons enthusiasts, web entrepreneurs (last.fm, eCourier, Tioti) to many coders, media artists and other generally useful, interesting and hyper connected people.

To join us tomorrow visit the web invitation (there are still places available) and for more information go to the Minibar site.

Human Tshirt Flipbook

Theres not much to say about this, other than its really great. You remember those old flipbooks from when you were a kid? Hundreds of panels painstakingly created so that when flipped then you got literally seconds of enjoyment! Well, this is the t-shirt version (apparently it used 150 shirts) by Erberts&Gerberts a chain of sandwich shops, and its brilliant:

Via Notcot.org

Theres a making of video in the full post

Continue reading ‘Human Tshirt Flipbook’




Archives

laFraise Submissions



  • Here is a new tee:D Rudolf the Reindeer with the red nous:D

  • Here it comes...

  • AMAZING HEROS "LIGHTNING" & "POWERMAN"


  • i try this one on european contest i made it with eown

  • Samara is back and she needs to refresh!

  • "votre 1er BOMB en kit, facile a assembler". le cadeau qui va faire des heureux pour noel!

  • La piste bleue ? La rouge ? Ou carrément la noire ?

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