Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Noah Hardgrave and "Transitional Cotton"

Just recently I heard that Noah Hardgrave at Screen Gems Silkscreening Co. (Los Alamitos, CA) had passed away. He supervised the printing of two of our favorite shirts: our dragon and burning castle, and our toddler knight in armor. The packing slips from Screen Gems that accompanied our shirts read, "Thank You for Buying Organic" (referring to the blank shirts we selected). Once I had a conversation with Noah about organic shirts and how frustrating is was that the selection of them is still so limited.
He introduced me to an idea I was unfamiliar with: transitional cotton. I'm going to paraphrase, in my uneducated way, what he explained: A farm that grows organic cotton can't sell its product as "organic" until the fields have had three years to allow chemicals from conventional farming to work their way out of the soil. Cotton grown in those fields during the three years is called "transitional cotton."
Since farmers are uncertain about the marketability of transitional cotton, it's a big financial risk for them to go organic, because for three years they will have to grow cotton they aren't sure they can sell. Noah Hardgrave said that if shirt makers bought transitional cotton to help farms go organic, more farms might make the change.
So The Mighty Squirm would like to say that if any shirt makers decide to support transitional cotton by buying it and marketing "transitional cotton shirts," we sure would be interested in printing on them! Going transitional is going green! In fact, even though we're using more organic blank tees, we sometimes feel uneasy about it, because to get organic cotton many shirt makers have to go pretty far outside the U.S. to get it, and this doesn't do the U.S. economy much good. If we all used more transitional cotton, we could all use "Made in the USA" labels in our shirts a lot more often.
Well, that's how we at The Mighty Squirm feel. And we also keenly feel the loss of Noah Hardgrave, an excellent screen printer who strongly advocated environmentally conscious apparel manufacturing.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Organic Bats and Haunted House Shirt Coming Next Week

Our "Bats and Haunted House" design, originally for kids, has been reprinted for adults on organic cotton shirts. Well before Halloween! And the bones and all the white areas of the design glow in the dark too...look for it early next week!
We truly think it might be the best Halloween shirt design out there. We might make a print on paper from it too. And we'll reprint it on an organic kids' shirt if we can find the right shirt lickety-split...there isn't much time left...keep your fingers crossed for us!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

GraveDiggersLocal.com will feature us tomorrow, August 10th!

We couldn't be happier that Grave Digger's Local 16 has chosen to showcase The Mighty Squirm's Etsy shop in their weekly feature "Tuesday uEtsy." Their site, GraveDiggersLocal.com, spreads the word about many artisans who specialize in wonderful dark merchandise. We've discovered some new favorites of our own on the site! The Grave Diggers' "union representatives" also post highly engaging commentaries about art, music, books, and film, mind-bending horror stories from history (check out the posts "Defrosting the Minnesota Iceman" and "The Bandit That Wouldn't Give Up"--wow!), and much more. If you're a connoisseur of dark culture, you won't be disappointed--these writers have probably found something interesting that you haven't yet!
Our Etsy shop can be found at http://www.etsy.com/shop/TheMightySquirm. It's worth multiple visits to Etsy not just for us, but for so many other original crafters. Some of our favorite brother and sister shops are listed on our Etsy home page.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Jackapotamus is selling a design SO MUCH like ours!

Jackapotamus, a store in Santa Monica, is selling a kids' shirt with a T-Rex skeleton that wraps around the side. It's a little different from ours, but the idea is so very similar. I saw it on a toddler in Santa Monica today and promptly told his mom the following story:
I met Cassandra, the owner of Jackapotamus, some time ago. We discussed my possibly selling shirts in her co-op store on Main Street. Two months later, she told me I could sell shirts in her store, but not the dinosaur skeletons because she was going to make her own. And now I've seen the T-Rex shirt. I can't prove there's a connection, but gosh...
What also looks suspicious to me is that the shirt doesn't appear in her online stores. It's harder for me to spot if I can't find it on the Internet, right?
My designs are all original, hand drawn by me (not traced from another picture reference), and I'm mighty proud of that. So, to get your hands on the ORIGINAL T-Rex wraparound design, visit themightysquirm.com! --Thea