Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Get them made overseas, or try to find a Made in US factory (good luck though) you can charge the same cost both ways, but having the hat factory do it they can print them flat in panels, and then sew in, so your design isn't as limited, and you can offer custom options for an upsell.So when you are making money having a different factory doing work, you can be making money domestically doing other work that isn't cents on the dollar.If you want to press them on, I would have Imagemark / Matsui make the transfers, make a couple cents on that markup, and then you would be whatever the application and hat markup is, but it is high labor no mater the process.Send it out, make better money domestically, and in the end you made more money overall than being tied up for cents. We struggle with this a lot here as everyone wants to be a hero and do stuff in house, but at the end of the day, a hat factory can do it better and cheaper, you can focus on what you do best, and the client and business wins in the end.I would price them what it costs both domestically and overseas, and tell them the pro's and con's of each. That hat is already from overseas, so the decoration may be as well, then they can do branding on the inside for the same price as well typically.
What we do know is our contact will be providing the hats, we will be pressing them only.
Makes me think of the toy store franchise job that surfaces every year. 800k shirts f/b. But wait for it..........over 90 ship tos (including Alaska) and some one has to figure the freight on all that. But theres more.........two sizes of art and you have to ship each day so constantly tearing down/setting up. Took 2 wks to get all that extra info so if you quoted it up front you're f'd. Oh and chargebacks if you're late
Way back my old shop did 100K shirts 1/0, for $0.125, so we grossed $12,500, and looking back, it really wasn't worth, other than to say we could get it done. Things to consider besides the challenge of running huge orders...