So you don’t get confused…
Screen printing, digital printing, in stock, out of stock, made to order, immediate delivery, delivery in 3 weeks… it’s starting to get a little chaotic in the e-shop. Especially with so many designs. The solution is simple – tags. Each product (especially T-shirts and sweatshirts) now has a colored tag in the e-shop that classifies it into one of two categories.
LIMITED – the highest quality screen-printed T-shirts and sweatshirts, the product is manufactured in a limited series of 50-100 pieces. In the e-shop, you can see the current number of pieces of a given size that are in stock, and we can ship them to you within 2 days of ordering. If a specific size is sold out, you’re out of luck and will have to wait for a reprint. When that will happen depends on how quickly the design sells out. It could be in a month, six months, or even two years. So we recommend that you don’t hesitate to buy. But if you miss out, just fill in your email address in the field below the tag in the e-shop, click “send,” and we’ll let you know as soon as this design is back in stock.
CUSTOM – digital T-shirt printing, these products are printed piece by piece according to your specific orders. You will not see the number of items in stock in the e-shop, only the text “on order”. You can order any size (usually from S to 5XL), but with a longer delivery time – we usually manage to ship within 3 weeks of ordering. If something gets stuck, we will resolve it with you individually by email.
At the beginning of 2025, most DixieGear T-shirts are in the CUSTOM category, and during the year we will gradually reprint the most popular designs and transfer them to the LIMITED category. We will launch most of our new products and reissues of older designs in a limited series, and you will also find all DixieGear sweatshirts in the LIMITED mode. The aim of the game is to maintain the current range of products while printing the best-selling designs in the highest possible quality, i.e. screen printing, and at the same time not drowning in the costs of stock, which you can probably imagine yourself.