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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Happiness is Fleeting by Kerry Callen | Threadless
src: cdn-images.threadless.com

Threadless (stylized as threadless) is an online community of artists and an e-commerce website based in Chicago, Illinois founded in 2000, by Jake Nickell and Jacob DeHart.

Threadless designs are created by and chosen by an online community. Each week, about 1,000 designs are submitted online and are put to a public vote. After seven days the staff reviews the top-scoring designs. Based on the average score and community feedback, about 10 designs are selected each week, printed on clothing and other products, and sold worldwide through the online store and at their retail store in Chicago. Designers whose work is printed receive $0 cash, 20% royalties based on net profits paid on a monthly basis, and $250 in Threadless gift cards, which can be exchanged for $200 cash. Each time a design is reprinted, the respective artist receives $500 cash (reference missing).


Video Threadless



History of the company

Co-founders Jake Nickell and Jacob DeHart started Threadless in 2000 with $1,000. Threadless began as a t-shirt design competition on the now defunct dreamless.org, a forum where users experimented with computers, code, and art. Nickell and DeHart invited users to post their designs on a dreamless thread (hence the name Threadless), and they would print the best designs on t-shirts.

Shortly after the first batch of shirts was printed, the founders built a website for Threadless and introduced a voting system where designs could be scored 1 to 5. By 2002, Jake Nickell had quit his full-time job, dropped out of art school, and started his own web agency called skinnyCorp, with Threadless continuing to build under the skinnyCorp umbrella. The company moved from his apartment to a 900-square-foot office.

A new batch of t-shirts was printed once the previous batch had sold out. In 2000, Threadless would print shirts every few months. By 2004, the company was printing new shirts every week. By 2004, Threadless was big enough that skinnyCorp did not need to continue outside client work. The company moved to a larger warehouse space. In 2004, profit was around $1.5 million, and in 2006 it jumped to $6.5 million.

In a 2006 Wired article, Jeff Howe coined the term crowdsourcing. Jeff Howe soon associated Threadless with crowdsourcing.

In 2008, Threadless was featured on the cover of Inc. as "The Most Innovative Small Company in America." Though Nickell did not disclose revenues for the article, Inc. estimated $30 million sales and a 30% profit margin. "Threadless completely blurs that line of who is a producer and who is a consumer," said Karim Lakhani, a professor at Harvard Business School who was quoted in the article. "The customers end up playing a critical role across all its operations: idea generation, marketing, sales forecasting. All that has been distributed."

In 2010, Abrams Image published Threadless: Ten Years of T-shirts from the World's Most Inspiring Online Design Community, written by Jake Nickell. The book features a decade of Threadless designs, interviews with many of the designers, and a year-by-year breakdown of how the company has grown and evolved.

The company is using a Marketing strategy called Co-creation which is allowing it's customers to be the product developers or designers.


Maps Threadless



Printing techniques

Screen printing

Most Threadless t-shirts are printed with the screen printing technique. Plastisol or water based inks are applied to the shirt through mesh screens which limits the areas where ink is deposited. Threadless printing techniques include gradients and simulated process, UV color change, oversized printing, puff, belt printing, vinyl, super glow, flock, embroidery, suede, metallic, blister, foil, and high density.

Direct to garment printing

In September 2011, Threadless announced Threadless Labs on its forum. Through Threadless Labs, the company will begin experimenting with new products and printing. The first Threadless Labs experiment is Direct to Garment (DTG) printing, a process of printing on textiles and garments using specialized or modified inkjet technology. Threadless now prints four new DTG t-shirts each week in addition to the week's 10 new screen printed shirts.


I'm Ready Now! by Phil Jones | Threadless
src: cdn-images.threadless.com


Retail locations

In August 2007, Threadless announced the grand opening of a retail store. In January 2014, Threadless announced it had closed its 3011 N. Broadway St. location in Chicago.


The Original Copycat by Budi Satria Kwan | Threadless
src: cdn-images.threadless.com


Book

In October 2010, Abrams publishers released a ten-year retrospective of Threadless t-shirt designs and the company's history.


Threadless | GoSend
src: gosend.com


References


RIDE IN 3D by Morgan Satria | Threadless
src: cdn-images.threadless.com


External links

  • Official website
  • All printed Threadless Designs

Gift Certificate by Threadless.com | Threadless
src: cdn-images.threadless.com


See also

  • Direct to garment printing
  • Screen printing

Source of article : Wikipedia