Need a new tee? Check out the offerings from these popular sites:
Threadless is one of the most popular shirtmakers out there. It started out with user votes to pick out which shirts would go on sale, and have since moved on to independent designers. When shirts sell out, they're typically not for sale again unless the demand becomes great. They're also set to open a retail store in Chicago next month.
Fishboy, with bent towards outdoors sports and activities like fishing, hunting, camping and hiking this maker of original funny t-shirts is creation of artist Paul Ocepek and biz partner Edward Fielding. They include women's shirts for active women.
Glarkware, a small Canadian shirt company, is based out of Toronto, Ontario, and has a fairly eccentric line of humor-related shirts. They've also got a line of T-shirts on the way for toddlers.
Shirt.Woot. From the same bunch that does good ol' Woot.com and Wine.Woot.com, is Shirt.Woot.com--a one-shirt-per-day service that rolls out a new design every night at midnight Central time. Every shirt is always $10 with free shipping, along with the option to get it delivered in two days for another five bucks. While a good deal of the shirts are designed by professionals, the service also runs a weekly "derby" with user-generated designs. The most popular design goes on sale, and the designer gets a cut of the profits.
Bountee is a hybrid service that offers both professionally designed T-shirts and a build-it-yourself solution. Bountee features a variety of "Web 2.0" features like tagging, user ratings, and commenting. It's also got a really slick, easy-to-use design.
Split The Atom is a U.K.-based T-shirt company that's pretty much exactly like Threadless, but with a smaller selection. It also takes user designs in return for a one-time cash prize.
Design by Humans has a very small collection of shirts, but offers some pretty decent prize money for winning designers with a daily, weekly, and monthly design contest. Each designer also gets their own profile page for listing any background information and to showcase some of their other works.
BustedTees and Defunker are two very different Net T-shirt services from the same company. Bustedtees is more about humor, while Defunker offers more designer solutions akin to Threadless. Both sites are really slick, but between the two, Defunker feels a bit snappier. There's also a pretty large price gap, with most Bustedtees topping out at around $16, and Defunker averaging in the high-$20s and mid-$30s.
T-ShirtHell. There's a reason this site has a warning page and a hellish name. These shirts are the kind that will get you stares in public, and usually not for a good reason. Definitely not for the faint of heart, or workplace.
The Cotton Factory doesn't actually make cotton, but they have a very solid selection of designer, and humor T-shirts. There's even a section of T-shirts less than 10 bucks. There's some real gems in this place, especially if you like "ninja" apparel.
You can find Digg.com shirts at Jinx.com.
Jinx is best known as the clothing company who handles all of Digg.com's merchandise. They also have a handful of video game-related apparel and shirts for Rotten Tomatoes, Revision3, and CNET's own GameSpot.
SnorgTees (formerly SnorgStore.org) is a humor-centric T-shirt site that does a new design every week. Shirts run at about $16 a pop, and the site ships worldwide.
Neighborhoodies is another hybrid site that mixes up professionally designed shirts with a build-it-yourself tool. Like Innertee (see the DIY section below), there's a smattering of graphics you can incorporate into your own custom designs. There's also a line of "Maternitees," which are specially fitted T-shirts for pregnant women. There's a line of Harry Potter-inspired T's.
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2 Responses to "21 T-Shirt Sites Worth Checking Out"Hey that's a good list! You should checkout our blog, we put our newest and most favorite t-shirts up on it. And we've just started printing our own t-shirts!
http://www.rockworldeast.blogspot.com
Good information...keep it flowing
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