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General => Industry News/ Announcements/Press Releases/Product Promotion => Topic started by: mimosatexas on February 06, 2015, 11:49:22 AM
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Not sure if I am even allowed to post in this section, but I didn't see anyone else posting this bit of news.
http://www.streetinsider.com/Management+Comments/Gildan+Activewear+%28GIL+to+Acquire+Comfort+Colors+for+ (http://www.streetinsider.com/Management+Comments/Gildan+Activewear+%28GIL+to+Acquire+Comfort+Colors+for+)$100M/10229198.html
I personally hate Comfort Colors, but I know the frats and a few other niches love them. I wonder if this will mean they aren't constantly out of stock when you place orders...
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I personally hate Comfort Colors, but I know the frats and a few other niches love them. I wonder if this will mean they aren't constantly out of stock when you place orders...
Or if now, Comfort Colors will have more oil stains
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Gildan is on the tear. Anvil, Buffalo, Comfort Colors. . .
pierre
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Gildan is on the tear. Anvil, Buffalo, Comfort Colors. . .
pierre
Like Staples buying Office Depot who bought Office Max
(http://www.musicfestivaljunkies.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/highlander.jpg.png)
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Gildan had a college bowl game..they have made it!
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With the recent issues I have had with Gildan i'm not sure that this is a good thing. I have seen an increasing number of oil spots and small holes in their shirts lately.
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With the recent issues I have had with Gildan i'm not sure that this is a good thing. I have seen an increasing number of oil spots and small holes in their shirts lately.
Yep, a few years back, no one felt that Mercedes boosted the reputation and cachet of Chrysler, but rather that Chrysler would drag them down.
That said, I use a lot of Gildan. Have since they were still made in Canada.
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Gildan had a college bowl game..they have made it!
Yep, saw that...
Steve
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With the recent issues I have had with Gildan i'm not sure that this is a good thing. I have seen an increasing number of oil spots and small holes in their shirts lately.
Yeah...how the hell do they get so many stains? Are the workers washing their hands in mineral spirits or something?
I've had a lot more lately where the neck seems off center also.
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I actually called my distributor a few weeks back to replace an order of about 400 pieces of G2000 in Royal. It seemed like every other shirt I loaded onto press had a stain on it or had offset openings. According to the distributor they have had numerous complaints recently. I have always printed mostly Gildan but due to recent events Im thinking about switching over to hanes.
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With the recent issues I have had with Gildan i'm not sure that this is a good thing. I have seen an increasing number of oil spots and small holes in their shirts lately.
If Gildan's quality gets any worse, they will be as bad as American Apparel.
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When someone replied to a post I made about ink on my jeans & shirts they suggested this stuff, I think it was Ripcord
http://www.spraywayinc.com/content/c-60-solvent-degreaser16-oz (http://www.spraywayinc.com/content/c-60-solvent-degreaser16-oz)
my mind immediately snapped to the GILDAN OIL STAINS I see more and more of too ;)
mooseman
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When someone replied to a post I made about ink on my jeans & shirts they suggested this stuff, I think it was Ripcord
[url]http://www.spraywayinc.com/content/c-60-solvent-degreaser16-oz[/url] ([url]http://www.spraywayinc.com/content/c-60-solvent-degreaser16-oz[/url])
my mind immediately snapped to the GILDAN OIL STAINS I see more and more of too ;)
mooseman
Next press release by Gildan will be that they've bought Sprayway, Inc. That way they'll get you coming and going . . .
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hahahahahaha!
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Gildan still suffers from stains? Can't say that I'm surprised. I've been out of printing for 5 years, probably closer to 6 and I actually miss it, yes...truth stranger than fiction! LOL!
Anyhow, during the last decade or so of production printing I bought tens of thousands of Gildan G2000 navy and black shirts annually (much more navy than black) and was always amazed at the percentage of stained shirts. Just how is that possible I always thought to myself?
Got away with most of them since they were dark and most had enormous graphics printed on them. I guess some things never change? The stains on other colors I used less often were a problem and wound up eating god knows how many printed shirts that we didn't notice prior. The charcoal gray or whatever they call it now was a nightmare. We'd print 500 pieces on the backs, then when running the fronts a ton were stained.
I think buying Comfort Colors is a good move for them. I own some Gildan stock bought back during the big crash of 2008 into 2009. Not a load of it, although it was just so cheap at the time I figured what the heck. The world was ending back then and I thought it just might survive. Still have some.
Hope everyone here is doing well!
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Gildan still suffers from stains? Can't say that I'm surprised. I've been out of printing for 5 years, probably closer to 6 and I actually miss it, yes...truth stranger than fiction! LOL!
Anyhow, during the last decade or so of production printing I bought tens of thousands of Gildan G2000 navy and black shirts annually (much more navy than black) and was always amazed at the percentage of stained shirts. Just how is that possible I always thought to myself?
Got away with most of them since they were dark and most had enormous graphics printed on them. I guess some things never change? The stains on other colors I used less often were a problem and wound up eating god knows how many printed shirts that we didn't notice prior. The charcoal gray or whatever they call it now was a nightmare. We'd print 500 pieces on the backs, then when running the fronts a ton were stained.
I think buying Comfort Colors is a good move for them. I own some Gildan stock bought back during the big crash of 2008 into 2009. Not a load of it, although it was just so cheap at the time I figured what the heck. The world was ending back then and I thought it just might survive. Still have some.
Hope everyone here is doing well!
Glad to see you stopping by Steve.
You actually cross my mind whenever I fire up one of my old stereo rigs.
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Gildan still suffers from stains? Can't say that I'm surprised. I've been out of printing for 5 years, probably closer to 6 and I actually miss it, yes...truth stranger than fiction! LOL!
Anyhow, during the last decade or so of production printing I bought tens of thousands of Gildan G2000 navy and black shirts annually (much more navy than black) and was always amazed at the percentage of stained shirts. Just how is that possible I always thought to myself?
Got away with most of them since they were dark and most had enormous graphics printed on them. I guess some things never change? The stains on other colors I used less often were a problem and wound up eating god knows how many printed shirts that we didn't notice prior. The charcoal gray or whatever they call it now was a nightmare. We'd print 500 pieces on the backs, then when running the fronts a ton were stained.
I think buying Comfort Colors is a good move for them. I own some Gildan stock bought back during the big crash of 2008 into 2009. Not a load of it, although it was just so cheap at the time I figured what the heck. The world was ending back then and I thought it just might survive. Still have some.
Hope everyone here is doing well!
Nice to see you here. I think sooner or later, you will see Gildan getting into having print shops actually taking print orders away from you printers out there and making $ on better margins on the shirt profit and the printing like Hanes does right now. They are following in their foot prints after all. At least your stocks will go up. lol.
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Dan are you talking shops like New Buffalo shirt Company because I'm pretty sure Gildan owns them.
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Well, now that you mention that, Gildan did buy out New Buffalo. I forgot about that so, yea, they already have print shops. ::) Hanes has had a few in Honduras for years also so Gildan just made a move to keep themselves in competition with Hanes. They both of course go after so called larger orders, but are doing the smaller orders that we all can do as well. Orders like 500 per design, 2 times a month. That can be done by the smaller shops for the same print cost...but, the garment manufacture can drop it 50 cents to a dollar and still make more profit than we can.