Threadless

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Threadless
Type Private
Founded 2000
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois, USA
Key people Founded by Jake Nickell and Jacob DeHart
Industry Retail
Products Apparel
Revenue $30 million[1]
Net income $9 million[1]
Employees 25
Parent SkinnyCorp LLC
Website http://www.threadless.com/

Threadless is a community-centered online apparel store run by skinnyCorp of Chicago, Illinois, since 2000. Co-founders Jake Nickell and Jacob DeHart started the company with $1,000 in seed money after entering an internet t-shirt design contest.[2][3]

Members of the Threadless community submit t-shirt designs online; the designs are then put to a public vote. A small percentage of submitted designs are selected for printing and sold through an online store. Creators of the winning designs receive a prize of cash and store credit.

Contents

[edit] Operation

Designers upload their t-shirt designs to the website, where visitors and members of the community score them on a scale of 0 to 5. On average, around 700 designs compete in any given week. Each week, the staff selects six designs. Each designer selected receives $2,000 in cash, as well as an additional $500 for every reprint.[2]

On occasion, special contests—known as "Loves Threadless"—run in association with various sponsors. These contests set a theme for designs, with a selection of additional prizes being awarded to the chosen winner; special prizes often relate to the sponsor.[4] The success of this concept led to several spin-off projects by the same company, including ongoing design competitions for t-shirt slogans at OMG Clothing and neckties and wallpaper at Naked and Angry. The competition from OMG Clothing was later integrated into the main website with the introduction of Threadless TypeTees. Multiple other companies have adopted the community model created at Threadless. Nevertheless, in mid-2006, Threadless expanded in a more traditional direction, adding shirts designed by selected artists. These designs, known as Threadless Select designs, are not subject to the voting process.

In the open source community, a Threadless t-shirt or design is considered to be crowd sourced because the designer and the company retain all rights to the design. As the "source" of a design—i.e., its vector graphics file—is not available for download, it cannot be considered "open source".

Threadless shirts are run in limited batches. When shirts are sold out, customers can request a reprint. However, reprinting occurs only when there is enough demand, and the decision to reprint is ultimately up to company. New shirts are released on Mondays.[5]

[edit] Additional product lines

In June 2006, Threadless added three additional product lines:[6]

[edit] Threadless Kids

Selected winning designs printed on American Apparel kid-sized t-shirts and onesies. In March 2007, Threadless launched ThreadlessKids.com, a site exclusively featuring these products.

[edit] Threadless TypeTees

Winning slogans printed on standard Fruit of the Loom or American Apparel t-shirts using fonts courtesy of T26.com, the result of the integration of OMG Clothing into Threadless.

[edit] Threadless Select

Designs contributed from Threadless designers who have previously won the main competition four times or more, bypassing the usual voting system, printed on American Apparel t-shirts, with the usual restrictions on designs extended somewhat to permit the use of more colours (8 instead of the normal 5), foils and metallics.

[edit] Blik Wall graphics =

In August 2007, Threadless announced that designs selected by the company Blik would be printed on stick on wall graphics on Blik's site and more designs have been added each month since. whatisblik.com [7]


[edit] Threadless Prints

In May of 2008, Threadless announced that they would be printing selected designs on a high quality paper and be selling them through the website. [8]

[edit] New T-shirts

In November 2006 Threadless announced that it would begin printing designs on a proprietary brand of tee shirts. Threadless posted in the Blog Forum on its website:[9]

"Imagine a tee that is less boxy than a Fruit of the Loom, but not as skinny as an American Apparel. Imagine a tee whose fabric is softer than American Apparel but not as thin."

The first design printed on the new shirts was titled "I Heart Threadless" and featured the Threadless logo on a charcoal-colored tee.[10] This change in tee shirts had long been encouraged by community members, although there were some complaints regarding the sizing of the new shirts.[citation needed]

Beyond this, complaints had also been posed regarding the side seams on the new tees. Worried customers had been voicing their opinions of the new shirts on the Threadless forum; in an effort to ease the concern, Threadless employee Craig Shimala posted "We're still toying with the specs [of the new tees]."[11] On January 3, 2007, Shimala posted, "[Threadless] made some changes based on everyone's input and should be receiving the revised samples soon."[9]

On December 3, 2007, Threadless posted, "Over the past 7 years, we have took [sic] to heart your comments, compliments, and complaints to help create our very own custom Threadless brand tee. [...] Over the next few weeks, we'll be introducing more and more designs on this new and exciting tee and eventually we'll be using them exclusively!" [12]

[edit] Retail store

In August 2007, Threadless announced the grand opening of a retail store,[13] located at 3011 North Broadway in Chicago. A variety of shirts from the website are available in the store and change every Friday. In the upstairs portion of the store is a gallery, in which customers may sign up for design classes.[14]

[edit] References

[edit] External links