Third Parties

blast from the past - gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt

Way back in the early 2000s, when we started printing t-shirts, we did all of the work ourselves. We bought a heat press, and lots of rolls of flock and plastic, and printed every single t-shirt by hand. Direct-to-garment digital printing hadn’t really been invented yet, sublimation printing was in its infancy, and this light-reflective film was pretty much the height of the technology that was available to us at the time.

blast from the past - gothstuff skull & crossbones shirt and tie
blast from the past – gothstuff skull & crossbones shirt and tie

The up side of printing every single garment individually was that we could offer a lot of flexibility. We quite often printed onto customers’ own t-shirts, and we also had a range of unusual-at-the-time items such as printed shirts, ties, and even underwear!

The down side of printing every single garment individually was that it took AGES. The more intricate designs took a long time to weed away the excess film, and the multi-coloured ones required several passes through the heat press. As a result, despite appearing to be successful in the numbers of t-shirts that we sold, I was never able to pay myself, and we didn’t recoup the costs of the printing kit until we eventually sold it all.

Play Hard t-shirt design
Play Hard t-shirt design

Nowadays, there are lots and lots of on-demand direct-to-garment printers around, and the printing quality from the ones I’ve tried (Inkthreadable, Qwertee, Redbubble and TeeFury) has been excellent. My only quibble with some of these sources, as you know, is a lack of plus-sizes in women’s garments.

I’m working on a range of new t-shirt designs (like the one above) at the moment, and I must admit I’m looking at Redbubble and wondering whether my designs, or perhaps some of Miss Mouse’s photographs, might work well on coffee mugs and cushion covers as well as t-shirts.

Miss Mouse tote bag
Miss Mouse tote bag

You’ve seen Miss Mouse and the Woodland Gang’s tote bags in the shop, of course. I chose Inkthreadable to print these for me because they have both organic cotton tote bags, and these which are made from recycled polyester and cotton waste from the garment industry. They also have a range of organic t-shirts, which I’d much prefer to be using over non-organic, but if their sizing isn’t inclusive… I don’t know. I don’t want to get to that place where my shop has so many different options that it’s too confusing to buy something as simple as a t-shirt, but at the same time I do want these things to be available to as many folks as possible.

I have dipped my toes into the water of Redbubble with two notebooks featuring Miss Mouse in Autumn and in Winter.

They’re printed in and shipped from the UK – unless you’re buying them from outside Europe, in which case they’re printed in and shipped from America. As with all print-on-demand products, there’s no next-day shipping, as the notebooks literally don’t exist until you order them! And making things takes time, even for large companies with (presumably) oodles of people and printers. So delivery usually takes about a week.

Miss Mouse & friends celebrity magazine
Miss Mouse & friends celebrity magazine

For instant gratification, I’ve also ventured into the world of downloadable items over on payhip. They host any items that I want to make available as digital downloads, and they handle all of the complicated tax paperwork for me which means that I don’t have to sign up for VATMOSS straight away.

I’ve started with Miss Mouse’s magazines, so if you missed the Winter 2016 edition which is sold out in print, this is the place to get it. It’s also the place to get not only the Woodland Gang’s Celebrity Magazine, but also the circus poster and the Woodland Times newspaper that originally went out only to Miss Mouse’s Patrons. There is just one copy of this magazine available in print, but it doesn’t include the poster or newspaper.

A4 downloadable diary pages
A4 downloadable diary pages

I’ve also uploaded some A4 diary pages. I designed these for myself, and have been using them to keep all of my University and volunteering activities organised.

If you’ve known me for a while you’ll be well aware that I have a terrible addiction to all kinds of diaries and planners… and also a total inability to remain faithful to one for an entire year. These A4 pages are undated, so I can print out a few, write the dates underneath the days of the week, and when I get bored with them or decide that a different format would better suit my needs, I can design something new! That way I don’t end up buying two or three different diaries each year, as I can just print out new pages whenever I need them. It also means that I don’t need to carry around an entire year in one go! At the moment I have three months’ worth of pages tucked inside a plastic wallet, and that’s so much more convenient – and a lot less heavy! – than hauling around a giant organiser. I strongly suspect that more of these will be forthcoming, particularly once I start back at University and need to keep track of all my lectures and deadlines.

I must admit that, as a lifelong hands-on maker, it does feel a little bit weird to be handing over the manufacture of my designs to a third party. But, with the best will in the world, I’m not going to set up a printing studio in my office (unless I suddenly come into possession of an entire letterpress workshop, which seems unlikely!), and this way I don’t have to buy boxes full of t-shirts or other printed items that may well sit on a shelf for years un-sold.

So, all in all, I’m going to say hooray for the third party!

Plus size, please!

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Mummy tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Mummy tshirt

Why are plus size organic cotton t-shirts still not a thing? 

I’ve been doing t-shirt-printing-related things for around eighteen years now, on and off. (These photos are from 2004.)

To begin with it was impossible to get plus size t-shirts at all (note to manufacturers: size UK16 is not a plus size!), and now you can, from a few brands, but apparently not from any of the organic ones. And they’re still not easily available from print-on-demand companies, who tend to offer a smaller selection of brands and styles, now that we no longer own the heat press and vinyl cutter ourselves.

(Also, while I’m having a rant, making things in a “loose fit” doesn’t mean that you can offer fewer sizes just because the actual width of the garment is the same as a larger size in another style!) 

blast from the past - gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt

I really want to design some more t-shirts, but organic cotton is apparently only for people who have a narrower than 43″ chest. Oh, except for men. Who can have organic t-shirts up to a 62″ chest. Why can’t women have that?

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt

Well, apparently they can, because most of those t-shirts are labelled “unisex”… but because the sizes get longer as they go up in width, well, heaven forbid that a shorter person might want a XXXL t-shirt that doesn’t come down to their knees. Or with flapping great sleeves down to their elbows.

I really want everything I design to be available to as many people as possible (which is why I made my dresses up to a size 30+), and it’s making me very cross that, eighteen years since I started printing t-shirts, this apparently still can’t happen.

Blast from the Past – t-shirts

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt spotted at InFest 2018
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt spotted at InFest 2018

Well, this was an unexpected blast from the past! 

Way back in the mists of time (otherwise known as 2001) I ran a business called “GothStuff”. It did what it said in the tin – I made and sold a variety of clothing, jewellery and footwear, online and at various goth/alternative events. One of those events was Infest, a music festival that’s enjoying its 20th anniversary this weekend. My husband is there… and he spotted one of our t-shirts out in the wild! We haven’t sold these for at least a decade, so I’m extremely impressed that this one still going! 

(Particular thanks must go to this lovely man, and also to my husband who, when he texted this to me, was met with the reply “GDPR!! Ask him if I can blog the picture!!”) 

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Cthulhu tshirt

This is what Baby Cthulhu looked like when he was brand new! Paul designed the characters, and we heat pressed them onto heavyweight t-shirts using a flock medium, so the images were fuzzy. Each colour had to be cut out and pressed separately.

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Frank tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Frank tshirt

All of the characters were horror literature or movie themed – we called them “Baby Horrors”. This one, as you can see, is a baby Frankenstein’s monster… 

blast from the past - gothstuff Baby Mummy tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff Baby Mummy tshirt

…and this one is a Baby Mummy. (I know. Very confusing.)

blast from the past - gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt
blast from the past – gothstuff light reflective bat tshirt

We also had a range of… I suppose you could call it “casual clubwear”, if that’s a thing. You can’t really tell from a picture taken in daylight, but this silver bat silhouette was light-reflective.

blast from the past - gothstuff skull & crossbones shirt and tie
blast from the past – gothstuff skull & crossbones shirt and tie

We also had neon colours that were blacklight/uv responsive, which we printed onto more formal workwear, as well as onto t-shirts.

(I don’t think I ever went to work looking quite like this, but those actually were my work trousers for a while!) 

These photos were taken in the summer of 2004, and while I was digging around in the depths of my computer looking for them, I also turned up some other photos of things I’ve made over the past few years. So, prepare yourselves – there’s a new Blast from the Past coming every day for the rest of the week! 

Upcycling: a quick t-shirt re-vamp

Posted on 12:00pm Monday 11th Jun 2018

eternal magpie upcycled tshirt
eternal magpie upcycled tshirt

Some days it’s all about sewing lovely dresses. 

Some days it’s all about taking the scissors to your favourite t-shirt because you can’t stand the way it’s touching you. 

Today is the second kind of day. 

I bought this t-shirt last year, and completely forgot (despite it being very clearly stated on the website!) that this particular brand runs small. I wear it a lot, because I love the print, but I always find myself tugging at the too-high neckline or fussing with the too-tight sleeves. 

Today I’d had enough, so I took the scissors to it and turned it into a vest! 

All I did was very carefully and neatly snip off the sleeves and the neckline ribbing.

Jersey t-shirt fabric doesn’t fray, so I could have simply left it at that and allowed the edges to roll over – no sewing required! 

I decided that I would quite like to hem the neckline and sleeves, so all I did was fold the raw edges to the inside, pin the hems into place making sure they were nice and even all the way around, and stitched them down. 

I didn’t use any fancy stretch stitches, I didn’t use my overlocker to cover the edges. I just stitched the hems with an ordinary straight stitch and then ironed them nice and flat. And now I have a brand new favourite t-shirt, that doesn’t irritate me every time I put it on. Success! 

T-shirt shrug

T-shirt shrug

I was supposed to be at a barbeque on this gloriously sunny Sunday afternoon, celebrating the success of the Witt Studio Chorus Summer Showcase. Unfortunately my kind husband decided to share his filthy germs with me, and now we’re both too ill to go. Bah.

I’ve spent most of the day sitting on the sofa feeling sorry for myself, watching Torchwood and Doctor Who, and looking at the internet in the name of research for a new range of clothing that I have in mind. While I was wandering about on Pinterest, I stumbled across this tutorial for turning a t-shirt into a shrug.

Deciding that I couldn’t go a whole day without making something (not even a poorly Sunday), I dragged an old organic t-shirt out of the languishing stash, set about it with scissors, the sewing machine and a bit of ribbon. The whole thing took less than an hour – including taking photos and writing this.

The only thing I did that wasn’t specified in the pattern was to stitch the ribbons into position at the end of the casing. This means that the gathering is no longer adjustable, but it stops the ribbons from disappearing inside the t-shirt.

I have a giant pile of old t-shirts in the Shed, just waiting to transformed into something new. I can feel a few more of these little shrugs coming on, I think.

The Return of Baby Cthulhu!

Yes, he’s back – the triumphant return of the Littlest Elder God!

We have an extremely Limited Edition of just twenty-four Baby Cthulhu t-shirts now available.

If your size isn’t shown in the store, that means we’ve run out. Sorry about that, but Baby Cthulhu’s quite popular, despite his unfortunate habit of wreaking insanity wherever he goes.

If you’d like to pre-order a t-shirt to be printed in our next batch, please let us know! We need a minimum of twelve orders before we can print more, so we can’t guarantee how long you’ll have to wait.

Click to buy Baby Cthulhu t-shirts!

Before and After…

Before: 1 REM t-shirt, size XL. This is what happens when you’re at the back of the merchandise queue.

After: 1 REM t-shirt, much smaller. This is what happens when you have a sister with a sewing machine. 😉

My sister bought this t-shirt when she went to see REM at the Milton Keynes Bowl, approximately one million years ago. She has kept the t-shirt all this time even though it in no way fitted her. In fact, her fiancé wore it when they went to see REM in Hyde Park, slightly more recently. Apparently it was also too big for him, and he’s over six feet tall!

It’s actually quite nerve-wracking, chopping up other people’s precious t-shirts. All it takes is a snip in the wrong place and you’ve got a hole, or a t-shirt that’s too tight. Band t-shirts in particular come with a lot of memories attached, which imbue them with greater significance than you might expect in a mere item of clothing. Being entrusted to refashion someone else’s beloved t-shirt is actually quite an honour.

Befores and Afters…

Pressgang halter-neck

This one is for me to wear when I go and see Pressgang tonight, for the first time in about eight years! It won’t be for sale, mostly because it’s got a dirty mark right down the front. I think this t-shirt had been relegated to decorating duty because it was too big to wear. Shame, as it’s quite pretty now!

Kill II This ¾ sleeve

Please excuse the offensive text. I’m sure you can imagine how thrilled Paul’s mother was, when he came home from University wearing this! 😉

Please also excuse the fact that I’d already chopped off one of the sleeves before I remembered to take the “before” picture.

Despite the text, I’m actually really pleased with this one. It’s another which is going to look a lot better on a person than on the mannequin – her shoulders aren’t wide enough to show the puffed shoulers of the t-shirt! The sleeves are ¾ length, and trimmed with lace. The top is nice and long, and despite the fact that I would never wear it, I actually really like it!

For any Kill II This fans out there, it’s a size 34-36″ chest, and it’s £15.

Tie-dye beach dress

I’m really pleased with this one, and am sad that it’s a tiny bit too small for me, so I won’t get to wear it in the height of summer. The bodice part is made from the sleeves of the original t-shirt, and the skirt is made from the rest! It’s elasticated around the underbust seam and at the back of the bodice, so you don’t have to rely on the little straps alone to hold it up.

I love the swirl of the tie-dye, especially on the back.

Best fit sizes 30-34″ chest. £15.

I’m really enjoying making these. It’s a challenge to look at each individual t-shirt, and work out the best kind of top which can be made from it. As all of these t-shirts are pretty old, some of them have holes, some of them have lost their stretch, or the fabric’s twisted at the seams. It’s fun to take the best bits, and turn them into something which is wearable again.

Gene and The Magic Roundabout.

Today I made a t-shirt:

Unfortunately, I sewed the ruffle on inside out. *rolls eyes*

So I had to take it off, turn it the right way round, and sew it on again.

That’s better.
(The water spots are from the iron.)

(I forgot the “before” picture, but I’m sure you all know what a t-shirt looks like.)

I also made my favouritest dress in the whole wide universe.

It couldn’t possibly be any more ’70s if it tried really hard.
It’s made from a pair of Magic Roundabout curtains, which I bought from . I think the curtains are probably as old as me.

As soon as I’ve bought and sewn in the zip, you can expect to see me wearing this at all times.

How To Make Friends and Influence People…

Just a quick experiment on an Easter Sunday afternoon…

While Paul was playing Star Wars Lego on the X-Box, I chopped up his old Terrorvision t-shirt and turned it into this…

Before and After:

More Afters:

(the back print // off-the-shoulder // print on the sleeves)

It’s based on the raglan tunic dresses that I made on Wednesday and Thursday. I wanted to see whether I could make the pattern work as a t-shirt with an elasticated neck, and the answer appears to be yes!

This will only really work with generously-sized long-sleeved t-shirts though, otherwise there won’t be enough fabric. Therefore my next plan is to translate the raglan sleeve into a fitted style, which I can make up from smaller t-shirts.

I have loads of t-shirts waiting to be chopped up, so I’m hoping to make quite a few of these tops to take to the Art Market next weekend.