personalized shirts

personalized shirts is hot & popular. Get latest personalized shirts fashion and info now.

Monday, August 14, 2006

personalized shirts: Donaldson matches shirts, pistol grips

ELIZABETH YORK
Odessa American

ODESSA, Texas - Ector County Sheriff Mark Donaldson has more fur in his office than your average herd of wildebeests.

Sitting in a thick wooden king-chair covered with bronze stars and hairy cowhide, Donaldson reigns at the Ector County Detention Center. He folds his hands, leans forward and peers out over his set mustache.

"I like to think that I'm hard-nosed with criminals," Donaldson said. "The main thing I try to do is serve the public. To try to do things right and try to be as efficient as we can."

Donaldson keeps his pistol right-hand ready. The long-time West Texas lawman isn't afraid to take on bad guys and put them behind bars - and he's not afraid to color coordinate either.

He makes it a daily habit to match his gun grips with his shirt - can you say purple and canary yellow?

"People always say, 'How many guns do you have?' Donaldson said.

But the secret is in the grips.

Each day Donaldson covers one of his two 1970s-model Colt 1911 pistols with one of his 19 sets of gun grips. (At the time of the interview, he was waiting for an additional grip with an American flag and eagle design to arrive.) He screws one of the decorative grips onto a pistol handle before placing it in his black gun holster.

Donaldson chooses from a collection of grips made of wood or synthetic materials in colors like canary yellow, marbled blue, green, black, red, orange and brown.

"I'm not one of the white shirt people," he said. "I like bright colors."

Even John Wayne wore yellow gun grips, Donaldson reasoned. But the Duke fan draws the line on some shades.

"They make pink (gun grips), but I'm not going there," he said. "I have pink personalized shirts, but I just wear black with those."

If a John Wayne doll, commemorative rifle, replica belt, framed drawing and even Wayne toilet paper in Donaldson's office aren't enough, Robert Hollmann, an Odessa author and attorney, can vouch for Donaldson's dedication to the Duke.

"He dresses like John Wayne," Hollmann said. "He even tries to walk like him I think."

Hollmann has known Donaldson for about two decades. The men ride horses together and act in the annual Wild West Show at the Permian Basin Fair & Exposition.

"He always writes it to where he wins," Hollmann noted of the skits.

Donaldson preserves justice in real life, too. Midland County Sheriff Gary Painter has known Donaldson for 20 years. He said Donaldson is respected for upholding morals and representing Odessans well.

"In West Texas especially, it's a positive role," Painter said of the position of sheriff. "We get on a one-to-one basis with our citizens."

David Johnson, pastor of Central Baptist Church, has been a buddy of Donaldson's since the two were in junior high. Donaldson has always been tough, winning school weightlifting competitions and once pulling a lodged fishhook out of his thigh without flinching, Johnson said.

The black ostrich boot-wearing-sheriff also has charisma, he said.

"I'd call him the tough and tender, steel and velvet-type guy," Johnson said. "He's always been pretty stylish."

Donaldson's sense of style goes back to working at Pro-Am golf tournaments at the Odessa Country Club in the mid-'60s. As a boy, he remembers looking up to professional golfer Doug Sanders.

"Everything matched on him. He was real flamboyant," Donaldson said. "I guess being impressionable at that age and seeing how people reacted to him."

Donaldson isn't limiting his matching attire to gun grips. On a recent day, he wore yellow gun grips and a yellow shirt with - what else - a yellow ballpoint pin in the shirt pocket.

"That's kind of a new thing that I started," Donaldson admitted of the colored pen.

Chris Pipes, chief of the Odessa Police Department, has known Donaldson for more than 20 years and worked closely with him during the past four-and-a-half years.

Pipes recalled an incident in which several sheriff and police units were chasing a stolen vehicle on Loop 338. Donaldson sped in front of the pack and pulled beside the auto thief.

"The sheriff himself shot the tires of the car," Pipes said. "He's not afraid. He leads by being right in the middle of the action. The fact that he matches his pen and his gun grips and his shirt - I think that's indicative of a person who gives attention to detail."

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

personalized shirts: Fans puts their shirts on Boro!

Aug 8 2006
By Si?N Powell


BORO fans have been flocking to buy the Nuneaton football club's new shirt ready for Saturday's start to the season.

Club bosses are hoping the town's side can build on last year's bumper season for what should be the team's last season at their Manor Park home.

The new blue and white striped personalized shirt - sponsored by Stuart Plumbing and Heating Supplies - has been flying out of the club shop at the ground, ready for this weekend's home game against Workington.

Dave Riche, sales manager at the club, said: "Shirt sales have been really good, there's been a lot of demand for the blue and white stripes - the fans never wanted them to go.

"People do seem to like the shirt, it's a very lightweight shirt this year, the lightest spec of shirt, the same as they wear in Italy. It's very good quality and made by Sport Italia who do Derby and Middlesbrough."

Mr Riche said the new yellow and blue away kit was "a bit retro" and reminded him of the Crystal Palace shirts of the late 1970s.

The squad will wear the away kit for the first time when they take on Worcester City away on Monday.

Season ticket sales have also rocketed since the club's FA Cup campaign last year, in which the Conference North side held Premiership team Middlesbrough to a draw in the home-leg of their third round clash.

The team was eventually defeated by their Boro namesakes when they travelled to the Riverside Stadium a week later.

Mr Riche added: "When you can take 5,000 fans away with you on a Tuesday night you know your season tickets will go up.

"The turnout was almost 2,000 people by the time the season finished, hopefully the gate on Saturday, the first match of the season, will be considerable. I would like to try to push 2,000 if we can for the Workington game."

The club has had a promising pre-season, with the side losing just one of its matches - and Boro have also beaten big name local rivals, Coventry City.

Mr Riche added: "Really we are up there among the favourites, we've got to be going for promotion."

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

personalized shirts: 'Defend Youngstown' T-Shirts Become Hot Seller

POSTED: 11:19 am EDT August 7, 2006
UPDATED: 11:48 am EDT August 7, 2006

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio -- A Pittsburgh native said he's having a hard time keeping up with orders for his T-shirts that say: "Defend Youngstown."

Mahoning County Courthouse employee Phil Kidd said Youngstown is a great town, and he got tired of hearing cracks whenever he would tell how he moved there from the bigger city to the southeast. So, the 27-year-old Army veteran had an artist friend design the shirts, which feature the slogan surrounding a drawing of a muscular steel worker wielding a sledgehammer.

Six months ago, Kidd started by giving away 25 personalized shirts. Then, he sold more than 750 of them -- and the orders keep coming in. He said his idea has really "caught fire."


Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

personalized shirts: T-shirts show slain Sri Lankans worked for French NGO

By Peter Apps

TRINCOMALEE, Sri Lanka (Reuters) - Fifteen local staff for the French aid group Action Contre La Faim found executed in eastern Sri Lanka after a fierce battle between the army and Tamil Tigers have been identified by their personalized T-shirts, a top aid official said on Monday.

Fourteen Tamils and a Muslim were found on Sunday in the ruined remains of their office after Tamil Tiger rebels pulled out of the eastern town of Mutur, site of the fiercest fighting since a 2002 truce halted two decades of civil war.

The aid workers were helping families battered by the 2004 tsunami. Most of them were found shot in the head.

"We had a team, which on hearing their staff had been attacked, visited their office in Mutur," said Jeevan Thiagarajah, Executive Director of aid group umbrella body the Consortium for Humanitarian Agencies (CHA).

"We found their office trashed and found 15 individuals, 11 male, four female, who were wearing their T-shirts, lying face down dead in their compound," he added. "Every one of them, unfortunately, is wearing their Action Contre La Faim T-shirts."

Action Contre La Faim said they had no further details.

"Today we will go out to collect the bodies and do our best to carry them back," one ACF staffer said by telephone.

The pro-rebel website www.tamilnet.com has already blamed the army for the killings. The military, which now has control of Mutur -- a ghost town after an estimated 20,000-30,000 residents fled shelling last week -- accuses the Tigers.

The bodies were found by the army when the Tigers had taken control of certain pockets in the town and when they pulled back it was reported by civilians that they had robbed banks and killed indiscriminately," said Major Upali Rakjapakse, senior coordinator at the national security media centre.

"It could have happened during that time."

Like most of the east coast, Mutur was hard hit by the tsunami, which killed 35,000 people around Sri Lanka. Tsunami damage is still very visible in the town and rebuilding has been slowed by recent conflict.

(Reporting by Simon Gardner)

Thursday, August 03, 2006

personalized shirts: NFL refs introduce rules changes, fashion changes at Giants camp

8/3/2006, 7:00 p.m. ET
By DAVID PORTER
The Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Coming this fall to an NFL stadium near you: fashion-forward referees.

Gone are the traditional vertical black-and-white stripes that have been a staple of the league seemingly since its inception and which live on in Foot Locker stores and DJ booths around the country.

In their place is a flashier look that features wide white stripes and thin black stripes that flare around the shoulders and upper arms.



In addition to giving their annual lecture on rules changes for the upcoming NFL season, several referees debuted the new threads this week at New York Giants training camp.

Not everyone was enamored of the new look.

"They should be riding on a horse at Saratoga," one spectator cracked Thursday while watching the officials oversee a practice session.

Making a fashion statement was not the primary motivation behind the decision to make the change, NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said. First was the desire for a lightweight, more efficient fabric that would be cooler in hot weather and warmer in cold weather.

"The material of our personalized shirts was very heavy, so everybody wanted a different material," said Walt Coleman, an NFL referee with 18 years' experience. "Everybody loves the material, and the shirts are really comfortable. I think everybody's just not totally sold on the style. My son said to me, 'I can't believe you're changing your shirts!'"

The second aim was to make the uniforms more easily accommodate the gear referees need to carry, Aiello said, which includes more layers of clothing in colder weather.

"The biggest reason we changed was to upgrade the performance quality of the uniform," he said. "The third reason was to give the uniforms a more modern, updated, distinctly NFL look."

Referees will wear the new Reebok-designed shirts and the traditional white knickers for most games, and will switch in cold weather to black full-length pants that will allow more room for additional layers.

Aiello wasn't sure when the league switched to the vertical stripes, but noted that NFL referees in the 1930s wore "solid white dress shirts with bow ties and beanies."

When asked his opinion of the new uniforms and whether he would have an easier time locating referees during games for a little spirited exchange of ideas, Giants coach Tom Coughlin replied, "Are you kidding? I'm just glad to have them out there. And I've usually been able to find them pretty well."