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Here
are some tips and FAQ's for a better shopping
Experience!
A
letter from the owner to all my new customers:
Depending
on the combination of items you ordered,
the order processing time will vary. In
order to maintain competitive shipping
rates, we ship all similar items in one
shipment.
In the event that an item is temporarily
out of stock or on backorder, we may hold
the rest of your items until the item
is restocked. As soon as it arrives in
our warehouse, we will ship your entire
order to you in one shipment.
Average Order Processing Time is 3-5 work
days if the product is in stock.
Please
only call customer service if it is an
extreme emergency for delivery of your
product by a certain date! "We do
not specialize in special delivery. We
do deliver exactly what you ordered in
a timely manner, that is my guarantee."
Thank
You for your business,
Kevin
Ford
Shirts Today LLC
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Unless
your selection is out of stock, most
orders ship within 3-5 working days.
All orders are resolved within 3 weeks.
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We
do ship to select International locations,
but it is very important to choose
International Shipping
during checkout! If you do not select
International
Shipping during checkout
we will recalculate your order and
add the necessary amount without contacting
you. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery
for all orders outside the USA (including
Canada)
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We
only accept credit or debit cards
online. If you would like to place
an order using other methods, please
email us at Service
@ Shirts Today.com
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We
add $2.00 for XXLarge.
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A
Short (but Authoritative) History of the T-shirt
Most inner-wear historians place the first
significant appearance of the t-shirt during
World War I. The story, repeated often, is
reasonable and probable.
American "Doughboys", as the soldiers
were called during the Great War, arrived
on the continent with heavy long-john underwear
worn under even heavier woolen shirts and
pants. This government issued uniform was
invaluable when the weather turned foul and
chilly, but on a work detail or during a hot
spell it was almost unbearable.
The Americans soon saw many French soldiers
sporting a short sleeved undergarment made
of light cotton, a fabric ideal to work or
play in. This t-shirt forerunner quickly became
a hot trade item and thousands of the comfortable
shirts came home with new owners. The Army
and the Navy (for once) caught on fairly quickly
and before long the t-shirt was standard issue,
changing the lives of millions of young men
for the better.
This story explains well the arrival of the
t-shirt to these shores but still begs the
question of its origin. Did the French truly
invent it? And, if not, who did?
The Answer Revealed!
The truth of the matter is that a t-shirt-like
garment was used for millennia in Europe and
has even been traced back though Roman times
and on to ancient Egypt. This simple, ageless
garment was the tunic, the true and most credible
ancestor of the modern t-shirt. Clear depictions
of it have been found in scenes carved in
stone dating back at least three thousand
years B.C.
The tunic was such a practical and simple
garment to make that its use spread throughout
the civilized world, making it a standard
for thousands of years. In more northern climes,
its sleeves were almost always long and the
"shirt" itself often reached to
the ground, looking less like a t-shirt of
today. Back in torrid heat of Egypt, however,
the short-sleeve tunic was often waist length
and made of cotton or linen, appearing quite
like a modern t-shirt, though much rougher
in feel and appearance
As decorative and functional as the traditional
tunic could be, it probably never reached
the iconic status of today's t-shirt. To understand
how that happened, come forward thousands
of years and across the sea to the early ‘50's
in the United States.
It was in World War II that the t-shirt as
we know it today really came into its own.
Millions of men were issued their standard
issue Shirt, T, Short Sleeve, Mark 1, in their
choice of colors, as long as it was white,
or sometimes olive drab in the Army and battleship
gray in the Navy.
Far from being a seldom-seen piece of underwear,
it proved to be practical and comfortable
outerwear during such informal events as latrine
digging or afternoon ball games. Propaganda
shots and movies began pouring in to the home
front showing the GI's fighting, working,
and playing in their t-shirts. The once hidden
garment was coming out of the closet, so to
speak, and Americans were quickly becoming
accustomed to seeing men wearing it.
Another war in Korea followed and by the early
50's, there were millions of young men in
civilian life across the country wearing their
t-shirts. It soon spread to the general population,
especially among kids. It was, however, still
considered an inner garment and hardly proper
for polite society. Hollywood, as it has done
with so many American customs, would change
all of that for good.
In 1951, a character named Stanley Kowalski,
played by a brash, in-your-face young actor
named Marlon Brando, spent a good deal of
the film A Streetcar Named Desire in his t-shirt.
The image of Brando in a t-shirt became an
icon in its own right and suddenly the young
and restless had a style they could call their
own and use to thumb their noses at their
square parents. Seldom has it been done better
than by James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause
in 1955. By this time, Elvis Presley was also
beginning to drive young girls wild in his
t-shirt and this previously inner garment
would never stay hidden again.
The next big move for the t-shirt came in
1959 in a move called Breathless. A woman,
Jean Seberg, wore a t-shirt on screen and
for one of the first times, if not the first,
a t-shirt with advertising copy on it was
seen far and wide. This particular shirt had
the words Herald Tribune, a popular English
language paper published in Paris, blazoned
across it. Evidently only a few of these were
made and it quickly became very "in"
among the international crowd to wear one.
The t-shirt had stepped up a notch on the
social ladder, and on the way, it had become
a medium in its own right
The T-shirt as a Blank Canvas
The flood gates were opened when it dawned
on people that they could use the t-shirt
to advertise, brag, inform, shock, bewilder
and exhibit whatever their imagination could
invent. Companies began to give away and sell
t-shirts emblazoned with their corporate logos,
often convincing people to pay for the privilege
of being a bill board. Certain designs became
a matter of cool and hipness, at least until
a more unique shirt was sported by some trend
setter somewhere.
As a blank canvas, the t-shirt responded to
one of its highest callings and only one's
imagination and technical ability are the
limits. It would be futile to describe the
ways the once hidden t-shirt has been used
and would require an ongoing and encyclopedic
effort. Just looking at the number of t-shirt
companies on the Internet today gives one
a hint of how important and varied this garment
is. Surely, social historians and anthropologists
of the future will dedicate vast amounts of
time unraveling the data contained in this
most popular of modern cultural icons.
Some Interesting Stats:
Recently, the company Jerzeez commissioned
a study on the modern use of t-shirts and
published some interesting, but not too surprising,
facts:
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Ninety-one percent of Americans profess to
owning a "favorite" T-shirt.
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Thirty-four percent say white is the color
of their favorite T-shirt, followed by the
second and third choices of blue and black.
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Sixty-two percent claim to own more than ten
t-shirts which would imply that there are
nearly 1.5 billion T's in circulation!
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Overall 70 percent of men and 54 percent of
women have more than 10 t-shirts.
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Of people 18 to 24 years of age, 79 percent
have more than 10 t-shirts.
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Nineteen percent of that younger group owns
more than 30 t-shirts.
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