If you’re looking for something in a higher price bracket, two standout brands were Wolf Vs. Other popular recommendations from the forum include Bella + Canvas, another wholesaler, and Uniqlo, which is similarly priced but less heavily rec’d. Regardless, I don’t know of any other place where I can purchase a tee with these kinds of credentials for $5.59. The initial landing page claims to sell a T-shirt that’s only 99 cents, but after getting hung up on by Amazon customer service - I’m sure it wasn’t personal - and then spending 40 minutes chatting with a rep, I wasn’t able to discover which one was dollar store-priced. By my count, the T-shirt comes in 32 different color options - from “Banana Cream” to “Heavy Metal” - and you can also order varying packages. Triblend (a tiny bit pricier, but still in the $7 range) and Premium seem to be the most popular, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg. Next level is great, you really can't go wrong.” One print shop owner praises it on Reddit: “I work at a screen print shop and touch a lot of shirts. Next Level is a wholesale apparel company that was in the mix with Gildan to acquire American Apparel, which means it makes a bajillion different T-shirt options that can be used for pretty much anything. It has four-and-a-half stars from 767 customer reviews and Next Level owns four of the top 11 spots in Amazon’s most popular tees rankings. Next Level’s bonafides get even more bonafide when you hop over to Amazon. “They fit slim, last forever, and are super comfy,” one user writes. The Next Level suggestion is the most upvoted comment in the thread. Like Monday, when someone posed a seemingly simple question to a personal favorite subreddit, Male Fashion Advice: “What's a good brand for plain t-shirts?”įive hundred comments flooded in - for context, the other current top posts on the subforum have 57, 131, 6, 1, 9, and 15 comments - and one that I, an alleged menswear expert, had never heard of was the clear winner: a roughly $5 tee you can buy from Next Level off Amazon. Like everything, it has its issues, but if you know where to look you’ll discover some of the most passionate and nerdy discussions on the internet. You can also see what we’re up to by signing up here. The archives will remain available here for new stories, head over to Vox.com, where our staff is covering consumer culture for The Goods by Vox. Thank you to everyone who read our work over the years.
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