Inside Amazon’s little-known graphic T-shirt-making business

In This Article:

A worker prints T-shirt in an Amazon facility for the Merch by Amazon program. (Credit: Amazon)
A worker prints T-shirt in an Amazon facility for the Merch by Amazon program. (Credit: Amazon)

When Monette Escaname-Requenez, an engineer in Texas, bought a black T-shirt with an Uncle Sam cartoon character for July 4 on Amazon (AMZN), she had no idea that it was actually made by Amazon. She just thought it was sold and delivered by Amazon. The print quality “looks to be pretty legit,” she said.

The Seattle-based e-commerce behemoth is known for its logistic system and for disrupting the retail industry, but few know that it is also in the printing and manufacturing business. Thousands of T-shirts like the one purchased by Escaname-Requenez are printed on-demand at Amazon facilities in Texas and Pennsylvania and then shipped nationwide. All the designs come from a program called Merch by Amazon, which has attracted big-name studios as well as amateur designers.

From game fans to Main Street

Amazon uses the digital printing process to make T-shirts. (Credit: Amazon)
Amazon uses the digital printing process to make T-shirts. (Credit: Amazon)

Merch by Amazon was originally for game developers who wanted to expand beyond traditional in-app advertising or purchases to physical products. Developers upload their own T-shirt designs, then Amazon prints it on demand and sells it. For each T-shirt sold, the design creator earns a royalty that increases based on sales and does not have to spend money on manufacturing and fulfillment work.

Soon Merch by Amazon expanded beyond the game fans circle, as holiday-themed designs and political slogans sprung up. Unlike other Amazon private label products, it’s not easy to tell which T-shirt is made by Amazon. Most customers, like Escaname-Requenez, don’t realize a shirt is printed inside Amazon factories.

Miguel Roque, director at Merch by Amazon, said he’s cautious about putting a Merch by Amazon logo on the product page. “It’s all about the customer and making good customer decisions,” he told Yahoo Finance. “Customers are buying a design they love. I don’t know when they’re making that buying decision, if they necessarily care or it’s gonna influence their buying decision.”

The minute a customer orders a T-shirt from the Merch program, Amazon sends that order to fulfillment centers closest to the destination of the customer. The printing process is similar to printing on paper. When an order comes in, racks of shirts are rolled over into the printers. At the end of the process, a finished T-shirt gets dried and folded before it is shipped to the customer.

Amazon said it prints, ships and gets an order to a customer within two days. Escaname-Requenez received her T-shirt four days after placing her order.

Manufacturing the Amazon way

A worker operates the Kornit Digital printing machine in Amazon facility. (Credit: Amazon)
A worker operates the Kornit Digital printing machine in Amazon facility. (Credit: Amazon)

Amazon has been on a hiring spree for its warehouses across the country, and employees are essentially working alongside robots. The same approach has been applied to its manufacturing process — to make a T-shirt, Amazon adopted digital printing by using highly-automated machines by Israel-based Kornit Digital.