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T-Shirts — SuperBuy Spreadsheet Guide

Staple tees, graphic prints, vintage washes, and the fits that make or break a summer rotation.

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T-shirts are deceptively simple. At first glance they are just fabric and thread, but the difference between a well-made tee and a budget replica becomes obvious after the first wash. In 2026, the market is flooded with options ranging from paper-thin blanks to heavy 300gsm luxury cuts. The most common trap buyers fall into is judging a tee solely by the graphic print. Print quality matters, but if the blank itself is low quality, the shirt will lose shape, the neckline will bacon, and the graphic will crack regardless of how detailed the screen is. Start your evaluation by looking at the blank weight and collar construction. A good tee has a reinforced collar with ribbed binding that holds its shape. Next, consider the cut. Boxy fits, cropped lengths, and elongated sleeves each serve different body types and layering strategies. If you plan to layer under hoodies, a slim-fit tee prevents bulk. If you wear tees standalone, a boxy cut with dropped shoulders creates a modern silhouette. Graphic placement is another detail that separates good from great. Chest prints should sit roughly 2-3 inches below the collar, and back prints need to be centered with enough breathing room from the neckline. Slight misalignment is acceptable on budget options, but anything more than half an inch off looks sloppy. Finally, color accuracy is notoriously difficult with washed and vintage tones. What looks beige on a monitor may arrive closer to off-white or gray. Ask for natural-light QC photos if the exact shade matters to you.

Boxy FitsVintage WashesHeavyweight BlanksMinimal GraphicsOversized Sleeves

Buying Tips

  • 1Check the blank weight first; 250gsm+ usually signals a quality base.
  • 2Look at collar ribbing width—wider binding holds shape longer.
  • 3Verify graphic placement against a ruler in QC photos.
  • 4Ask whether the tee is pre-shrunk or if you need to size up.

QC Observation Points

  • Neckline should lay flat without rippling or twisting when laid on a table.
  • Stitching along the shoulder seam should be reinforced, not a single straight stitch.
  • Print edges should be sharp; blurry or feathered edges indicate low-resolution screens.
  • Hemline should be even and double-stitched to prevent rolling.

Sizing Notes

Boxy tees are intentionally oversized in the body with shorter sleeves. Cropped lengths hit at or above the waistband. Elongated tees add 2-4 inches in length. Compare to a favorite tee from your closet.

Material Notes

100% cotton is breathable and softens with washes. Cotton-poly blends resist wrinkles and shrink less but can feel synthetic. Slub cotton has a textured, vintage feel.

Common Mistakes in T-Shirts

Buying based on graphic alone without checking the blank quality.

Ignoring shoulder-drop measurements on boxy cuts, which can look sloppy if too extreme.

Ordering your normal size without accounting for intended oversized or cropped fits.

Expecting exact color matching from studio photos—lighting changes everything.

Risk Reminders

  • Very cheap blanks often use reactive dyes that fade unevenly after two washes.
  • Thin collars stretch out permanently after a few wears and cannot be restored.

Frequently Asked — T-Shirts

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