
By now, you've defined your brand, you've selected the right products and now it's time to make your mark.
This step is about taking a generic garment & turning it into a commercial asset. It is the difference between "just a nice polo" & "The Official Uniform of", your Business, Club, Team or Event.
Let’s look at the science we covered in Step 1. The goal of your business is to be the "path of least resistance" in your customer's brain. You want Familiarity.
If a customer sees your logo on a hat, then on a shirt, then on a van and then on an esky at a picnic, you are building memory structures.
The more they see it, the more they trust it.
The more they trust it, the more likely they are to buy.
Unbranded gear is a missed opportunity. It’s silence. Branded gear is a billboard that walks around, talks to people and makes you money.
Your logo is about to live on a physical object, in the real world, on real fabric. Different rules apply.
Get these four things right and your branding will look exactly like it should.
Get them wrong and even a great logo can end up looking like an afterthought.
The file you send affects what we can do with it and how quickly we can do it. Give us the right file upfront and the job runs smoothly. Give us something tricky and we can usually still work with it, it just takes an extra steps and time.
✅ Vector files (AI or EPS) are always the ideal starting point. They scale to any size without losing quality and work across every branding method.
✅ Raster files (JPG, PNG, TIFF, PSD etc) are fine for many methods. DTG in particular works with raster natively. Embroidery converts everything into its own file format anyway, so raster is accepted there too.
✅ Outline your fonts before sending. If we don't have your exact font installed, our software substitutes something else. That "cool modern font" becomes Comic Sans faster than you'd think. Outlining locks the text as a shape, no surprises.
✅ Tell us where you want it and roughly how big. We'll help you refine it, but knowing your starting point saves a round of back-and-forth.
❌ Low res files, photos of old garments or scans or your business care are not ideal. But don't panic if that's all you have. We offer an artwork redraw service. Just flag it when you get in touch and we'll let you know what's involved.
The goal isn't just getting your logo onto a garment. It's making the garment look like it was always meant to have your logo on it. Colour is where that either comes together or falls apart.
✅ Think about the whole garment, not just the logo. An orange trimmed polo with an orange logo doesn't just look branded it looks intentional. That's the difference between "we had some shirts made" and "this is our uniform."
✅ Use a Pantone code if colour accuracy matters to you. It's the universal colour reference system. Don't rely on your screen to judge it, screens lie and everyones screen is different. Check a physical swatch book.
✅ Vary the look occasionally. Same logo, different size or colour version. A small variation catches the eye again and creates a new memory association.
❌ Don't expect a perfect colour match across different branding methods. Embroidery thread, print ink and screen colours all look and behave differently. They also have different ranges in their respective colour gamuts. Close enough to read as your brand is the practical standard.
❌ Don't box your logo in. Putting a coloured rectangle behind your logo to solve a contrast problem looks like a cover-up, adds visual noise and in the case of embroidery, adds stitch count, which adds cost. Talk to us instead, there are better solutions.
Every branding method has limits. Knowing them upfront saves you money and saves everyone from a disappointing result. The trick is matching the right method to the right artwork on the right product and that's exactly what we help you do.
✅ Match the method to the artwork. Got a photographic, full-colour design? Digital print. Clean bold logo? Embroidery or screen print. Not sure? Ask us before you commit.
✅ Think about placement in context. Consider what's actually visible when your team is working. not just how it looks on a hanger.
❌ Don't expect embroidery to handle gradients, fades or very fine detail. It's thread, not ink. Text needs to be at least 6mm tall or it turns to mush. Thin keylines around lettering add stitch count, add cost and usually look messy.
❌ Don't forget what goes over the top. If your staff wear bib aprons, a logo on the chest of the garment underneath is invisible the moment the apron goes on. Move it to the sleeve, shoulder, or somewhere the apron doesn't cover, or put the branding on the apron itself.
❌ Don't put social media handles or contact details on your standard branding. Your logo does the recognition work. Cramming a URL onto a chest logo creates clutter and dilutes the mark. The exception is a specific campaign where driving traffic to a link is the whole point.
Where your logo sits determines how often it gets seen and by whom. There's no single right answer, but there are smart defaults.









Left chest - The classic for a reason. Sits in the eyeline during conversation and is the default first choice for most garments. A good way to remember this placement is that it sits above your heart, cute! ❤️ Works best for smaller, cleaner logos.
Right chest - Mainly used as a secondary front position. Common when there are two logos to place, when a garment feature like a chest pocket blocks the left side or when staff regularly wear a name badge or ID on the left. Also a common placement for personal names or titles.
Centre front chest - The billboard. Great for bold artwork on tees and hoodies where you want the design to do the talking.
Upper arm - Underused but effective, especially on long sleeves. Reads well when someone's working with their hands.
Centre back neck - The designer label spot. Best for a standalone symbols or icons. Subtle, but noticed.
Centre back - Maximum real estate. Best for staff whose backs face customers, bartenders, kitchen staff, tradespeople on site.
Bottom hem - Clean and understated. Works best for a wordmarks or simple text. The kind of branding that rewards people who look closely. 😉
Hooded garments - We place artwork below the hood when the hood is down. If your logo is tall, the folded hood can cover the top of it. Worth factoring in when choosing between logo versions.
Multi Positions - Sometimes more is more. If you have co-brands, sponsors or a specific look in mind you can always double, or triple down!
✅ Need a specific or custom placement? Tell us before production starts. We just need to know ahead of time.
Not sure where to start? Answer these three questions and you'll have a shortlist in seconds.
What does your artwork look like?
What are you putting it on?
How many are you ordering?
| Method | Best For | Fabric / Surface | Min. Order | Works on Caps | Works on Hard Goods |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Embroidery | Clean logos, bold text | Most fabrics | 12 (new), none (repeat) | ✅ | ❌ |
| DTV | Multi-colour logos, specialty effects, sports | Smooth fabrics | 12 (new), none (repeat) | ✅ | ❌ |
| DTG | Full colour, photographic artwork | 100% cotton (light weight) only | 12 (new), none (repeat) | ❌ | ❌ |
| DTF | Full colour on most fabrics, dark & light garments | Smooth fabrics | 12 (new), none (repeat) | ✅ | ❌ |
| Supacolour | High detail, gradients, Pantone accurate on most fabrics, dark & light garments | Smooth fabrics | 20 (each order) | ✅ | ❌ |
| UV Printing | Vibrant branding on hard surfaces | Hard surfaces only | 12 (new), none (repeat) | ❌ | ✅ |
| Engraving | Permanent marks, fine detail, small items | Timber & metal | None | ❌ | ✅ |
That's OK, don't let that stop you.
Yes, and we won't start production until you've approved it.
It depends on how much has changed and which branding method is involved.
New to branding with us? Here's what to expect from first artwork submission through to production.
Each branding method has its own full write-up covering what it does well, where it has limits, file requirements and product page links.
Ready to get down to business? We've got a full run down on what you need to do get your merch & uniform vision launched & underway.
!