This t-shirt company is making its customers rich
Forbes
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Sept. 28, 2015
Teespring, a San Francisco-based startup, lets people create custom t-shirt designs and then sell them online without having to worry about inventory. Its sales pitch is that it helps fuel entrepreneurship around the world.
The NFL And Teespring Team Up To Sell Fan-Created Custom T-Shirts For First Time
Forbes
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Aug. 26, 2015
The NFL and startup Teespring announced a partnership on Wednesday to allow licensed apparel to be sold on the startup’s website, connecting America’s most popular sports league to a marketplace that sells millions of user-created products. The deal could pave the way to much more personalized apparel with NFL licensed images, and a path to enormous scale for the high-growth startup.
How Your T-shirt Can Make You Rich
Bloomberg Business
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April 16, 2015
Teespring, one of the top T-shirt sellers in the U.S., printed more than 7 million shirts last year. Hundreds of people like Hsu and Springer made more than $100,000 in 2014 selling tees through the company’s site; 20 collected more than $1 million, according to Chief Executive Officer Walker Williams.
Andreessen Horowitz Invests $20M In Custom Apparel Platform Teespring
TechCrunch
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Jan. 17, 2014
Teespring, a FundersClub and Y Combinator-backed startup that allows anyone to outsource the production and distribution costs involved with selling their own custom T-shirts, has raised $20 million in new funding in a round entirely led by Andreessen Horowitz.
SILICON VALLEY'S STARTUP MACHINE
New York Times
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May 5, 2013
Last year at Brown University, Walker Williams and Evan Stites-Clayton created Teespring, a crowdfunding Web site that sold custom-made apparel — “Kickstarter for T-shirts.” For six months they had mild success with fraternities and campus clubs but were only slightly profitable.