For rec leagues, club sports, esports teams, gaming orgs, and amateur sports clubs
Club and team merch — kits, fan gear, capsule drops.
Branded team kits for players, fan gear and supporter merch, dated capsule drops for tournaments and seasons, and team-staff apparel. Private-label finished, low minimum.
Why this matters for club and team merch
Club and team merch lives in two distinct buckets: kit-grade apparel for the players and fan-grade merch for supporters. Each has different fabric requirements, decoration choices, and sizing logic. The low-MOQ floor is right-sized for both — small enough to fit a roster or a fanbase, deep enough to do private-label finishing properly.
What we run
Team kits and player apparel
Performance tees, tank tops, and warmups for the roster. Numbered if needed (each numbered piece is its own SKU but production handles the per-name variance). Embroidered or printed team identity.
Fan gear and supporter merch
Cotton tees, hats, and hoodies merchandised for supporters. Often tied to a season or a tournament, dated as keepsake capsules.
Most-relevant products
The brand-stack finish
Every order ships with the same four-touchpoint private-label treatment — branded neck label, care/side label, decoration matched to the fabric, and packaging that does some work in the unboxing. Read the longer explanation on what private-label means or how the neck-label options work.
Common questions
What's the minimum order for club team merch?
Low minimums per style and color. For a club running both player kits and fan gear, plan on 40 of each per design — sales will model the SKU breakdown once you describe the season's needs.
Can the player kit have individual names and numbers?
Yes — name and number on the back is a standard treatment. Each numbered piece is technically its own SKU; for small rosters, the per-piece surcharge for personalization is modest. The low-MOQ floor still applies to the run as a whole, not per-name.
Performance fabric vs cotton — which for the player kit?
Performance fabric (moisture-wicking polyester or poly-cotton blends) for the on-field/on-court kit. Cotton for the off-field warm-ups and the fan gear. DTF prints best on synthetics; embroidery and screen print are the right call for cotton.
What about esports team apparel?
Esports team apparel is mostly cotton (worn for streaming and at events rather than for athletic performance) — same production approach as fan gear. Player jerseys with sponsor patches are common; sponsor-patch placements work the same as any co-branded layout.
Ready to spec a run?
Open the studio, pick a blank, drop in your logo, and submit. Sales replies within one business day.
Open the studio