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Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 65
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I'm the sole employee of my business. Over the past few years I accumulated a dozen or so company tee shirts that are no longer suitable to show up at someone's house in and I don't need that many shirts for crappy around the house jobs. I'd donate them, but I know some cut them up for rags (I'm okay with that) and others bale them and sell them by the pound (kilo) here or overseas. I don't want to see someone who picked up one or more of my shirts at a thrift store, pretending to be an electrician. Or am I just over thinking this as I get older? Thanks, Pete
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Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,988 Likes: 35
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I suppose you could burn them like old flags
Greg Fretwell
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 7,396 Likes: 7
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Most of mine went to the incinerator when I closed shop.
I kept two or three just for the memories.
John
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Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,988 Likes: 35
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I still have an Endean Electric T shirt from the old "secret society" days
Greg Fretwell
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Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,474 Likes: 3
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I have noticed a trend of companies ever-so-royally decreeing that employees wear "high visibility" T-Shirts .... while the cheap jackalopes expect their miserly paid help to run off to Wal-Mart and buy the darn things out of their poverty-level wages.
I'd look for some employees of such firms, and donate them. Let Scrooge see his crew advertising the competition! If he doesn't like it, he can print up his own.
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Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 4,294
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I'm a one man show too.
When my personal T-shirts are no longer presentable, I might wear them around the house or to bed. When they get beyond the pale, I tear them up for shop rags.
Previous employers T-shirts are treated pretty much the same way they treated me. I'll do the same as I do for my personal shirts if the treated me fairly.
(With one cheap "the check's in the mail" employer I gave my remaining shirts to a charity group that distributed them on Skid Row in Los Angeles about 15 years ago.)
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Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 946 Likes: 2
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I'm a one man show too.
When my personal T-shirts are no longer presentable, I might wear them around the house or to bed. When they get beyond the pale, I tear them up for shop rags.
Previous employers T-shirts are treated pretty much the same way they treated me. I'll do the same as I do for my personal shirts if the treated me fairly.
(With one cheap "the check's in the mail" employer I gave my remaining shirts to a charity group that distributed them on Skid Row in Los Angeles about 15 years ago.) Did you get any feedback on your donation?
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Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 4,294
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Did you get any feedback on your donation? Just the personal satisfaction knowing I'd donated my tee-shirts to those that deserve it (a bunch of winos) was plenty enough for me.
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Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,438
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Scott, I came across a shirt from our "mutual former employer" not long ago digging through some boxes I hadn't touched in years .
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Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 4,294
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Randy, I've still got one too and just by chance I've got in on right now
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Posts: 1,158
Joined: May 2003
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