Is Threadless Spec Work?

Coty Gonzales brought up a really interesting debate in a very thorough blog post he made recently about a book cover design competition Guy Kawasaki is putting on. The basic premise of the post focuses on highlighting the grey area between what is and is not spec work in the design world, specifically as it relates to Threadless.

Before I move on, let me clear some things up and make sure everyone is up to speed. Threadless does not design their own shirts. They use a crowdsourcing model where thousands of designers create t-shirt artwork and then submit it to the Threadless site. Visitors to the site (which include other designers AND regular schmucks like me) then vote which designs get printed.

One more thing to clear up; lets go over what spec work is. Here’s how it’s defined by no-spec.com, an issue-position website that seems to be the most thorough resource for anti-spec designers out there.

What is ‘working on speculation?’ By Elisabetta Bruno of ThinkCreation

What is “spec?”

“Spec” has become the short form for any work done on a speculative basis. In other words, any requested work for which a fair and reasonable fee has not been agreed upon, preferably in writing.

What’s so wrong with that?

In a nutshell, spec requires the designer to invest time and resources with no guarantee of payment.

So as I understand it, spec work occurs anytime a client requires the designer to essentially deliver a final or near-final version of the work in question so that the client can see the work before committing to pay for it. The designer is speculating, or betting, that the client will accept the work, and it understood on both sides that the client may walk.

So here’s the big question:

Is Threadless Spec Work?

Of course it is. An artist can’t get their t-shirt printed by submitting a proposal, a paragraph on what their shirt would look like….they have to actually do the work, and they have to do it first with no guarantee of payment.

  • Just to get consideration for acceptance of a design, the designer has to perform the exact same work that would have to be performed had they been guaranteed a print and paid up front.
     
  • There is no guarantee of payment or acceptance of the design. Having performed the work to design the tee doesn’t assure any level of compensation or printing for the shirt. Some intangibles like name and style recognition within the group of people that voted to print a losing design could be present. This isn’t available in situations where designs are all submitted directly to a client for internal review, but is something publicly visible crowdsourcing models like Threadless can offer.
     
  • If the client chooses not to accept a specific piece of artwork, the designer is still out the time and effort it took to create that artwork. By creating and submitting artwork to Threadless, the designer is essentially betting, speculating, that the design will be printed.
     

Designers, as far as I can tell, seem to hate spec work. I don’t blame them. What if after a day of work at my day job, my employer says “Look, it was pretty cool the way you completed XYZ, but we’re going to go with the way Dave did it, so that’s for your time, but we’re not paying you.” Hell, I would be livid, so I can see how a designer doesn’t want to do spec work generally.

So as far as I can see, Threadless is definitely spec work. The difference, is that it’s spec work worth doing, and it’s spec work that designers are glad to do.

There’s a HUGE difference between designing a tee for Threadless and designing a logo or website or whatever for some brand. When you design a logo, there’s really nothing else you can use that for. You can’t go offer that to someone else or anything.

When you design a t-shirt, if it doesn’t get printed at Threadless, you’re NOT out all the time it took you to design it because you can take that shirt somewhere else. You can hold onto it in your “completed” folder and wait for the right time to sell it yourself. You can take the artwork off the t-shirt medium and instead offer it on your website as an art print. You still own it, you can still USE it.

Let’s use another analogy here. You tell me and 2 other people that if we bake you a cake, you’ll check it out and might buy it. I bake you a chocolate cake, someone else bakes you a carrot cake, and the third person goes with vanilla. You take a look at all 3 and decide the carrot cake looks delicious, so you pay the guy that made you the carrot cake.

What about me? What about captain vanilla? Are we out a couple hours of time and effort? Definitely not, because we can still enjoy the fruits of our labor. I can take my chocolate cake next door and offer it to your neighbor, who might pay me for it. I could give it away, donate it to a charity bake sale or I could even eat it myself.

The risk-reward ratio of designing for Threadless is just…stupidly awesome. This is especially true for artists that aren’t established. You design a t-shirt (which is something you’re going to do anyway, and if it doesn’t sell at Threadless you’ll do something else with it) and you get to parade it around in front of prospective buyers. If you’re chosen, you get a shitload of money and a feather in your cap. You’re not just a t-shirt designer anymore, you won at Threadless, you’re good and you can take that to any brand you may design for in the future.

One could argue that it’s not spec work if it’s something you’d do anyways, without Threadless. I mean, if you sit at home and just kick out dozens of t-shirt designs without knowing where they’ll go, Threadless probably isn’t spec work to you. After all, you’re deciding after the fact to send it to them and the work’s already done at that point.

But if you sit down and say “today I’m going to design a shirt and try to get it printed at Threadless” then yeah, it’s definitely spec work. It’s the kind of spec work you ought to be doing because the risk is practically zero (you can get paid for that design, if not at Threadless, then somewhere else) and the reward potential is so high.

That’s what I think. What do you think?

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Tuesday, August 3rd 2010 - 10:07 am - Other T-shirt Stuff

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T-Shirt Link Tuesday: 5/18/10 Edition

Goooooooooood morning Vietnam!

It’s finally not Monday anymore…though I would argue that it certainly feels like it! It’s still as rainy and dreary here as ever…I’d definitely be alright with the sun coming out to play. Anytime now. Really.

Anyways, there’s no time to let the rain get you down because I’ve got a pretty sweet collection of links here for you! So without further delay:

108 LOST T-Shirts to Celebrate the End Including 20 You Can’t Buy – Coty Gonzales
How could this one not top the list this week? This is a thoroughly exhaustive list of Lost-related t-shirts put together by tee-blogger extraordinaire, Coty Gonzales. As the series draws to a close, there’s no reason to not work your way through this list, if only to marvel at its size and sheer amount of work that went into compiling it. Bravo!

Novel-T Team Jerseys – Andy @ Hide Your Arms
Andy wrote about these interesting shirts from Novel-T. They depict various American authors and literary figures as members of a softball team. Each shirt features a name and number on the back and a representative image on the front from a book by that author (or containing that character).

While I zipped around Novel-T’s site I found a few that I liked more than the Vonnegut shirt Andy picked out. I think the idea is truly very clever and I wouldn’t mind wearing Gatsby or Darwin honestly.

Andy does point out that their website is their weak point, and as much as I hate to admit it, it could use some work. There’s nothing wrong with it visually or functionally, but the usability definitely needs some TLC. That said, I’d love to see these shirts get the stage they deserve.

Ghostbusters Glow in the Dark Tee – Ollie @ Cottonable
Ollie pointed out this clever t-shirt that makes you look like Venkman right after he got slimed. Again. The design is solid and the use of glow in the dark ink is what takes this shirt from “eh, that’s kinda clever” to “duuuude, check that out.”

I really want to re-watch Ghostbusters now, it’s been forever. Time for a Bill Murray fix.

Thread Notes T-Shirt Newsletter – Shameless Self Promotion
So it would be awfully awkward to link to Thread Notes everywhere this week except a post full of t-shirt links. Thread Notes is a t-shirt newsletter I started to offer exclusive videos, coupon codes and other goodies to subscribers. I’m giving away 7 Design by Humans t-shirts starting May 24 to celebrate the launch, how cool is that?

If you like this site, you’ll love Thread Notes. If you want to see my mug pitch the idea to you, check out my Beautiful Weather for a Drive video. There’s a sign-up form in the sidebar here or you can check out Thread Notes for a video.

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Tuesday, May 18th 2010 - 11:41 am - T-Shirt Link Tuesday

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T-Shirt Link Tuesday 10/06/09

It’s been forever since there’s been a t-shirt link tuesday! Let’s fix that right now. T-Shirt Link Tuesday is all about giving recognition to the other great t-shirt blogs out there and the awesome things that they come across. Check these guys out!

The Big Fifth Eye (Troundup.com)

The Big Fifth Eye

Colin over at Troundup wrote about this eye-catching (oh man! cheesy pun of the day!) t-shirt from the folks at Resist Today. There’s so much weird in this shirt, you can’t look away. It’s like a train wreck….but a good train wreck. I can’t say that I know what it means or what it’s supposed to say, but that’s alright. The detail is great and the shirt is unique!

Check out Colin’s original post
Have a look at The Big Fifth Eye ($24) at Resist Today

Gorilla Cop (Hide Your Arms)

>Gorilla Cop

Andy at Hide Your Arms posted this interesting tee from 57Thirtythree the other day. The one color design reminds me a little bit of Toxic from Van Rockn. The placement is unique and it reminds me of Planet of the Apes. Charlton Heston FTW!

Check out Andy’s original post
Snag Gorilla Cop ($32) from 57Thirtythree

Protect The Skin You’re In (Fat Seagull)

Protect The Skin You're In

What can I say about this…naked women on t-shirts. It’s done fairly tastefully. Well, tastefully in a not cartoon-barbie redneck-trash sort of way, anyways. Prominent celebrities and fashion icons adorn this line of tees, and all proceeds go towards cancer research. The shirt seems to only be available offline from Marc Jacobs stores for $35.

See the original post for more details

The Struggle (Coty Gonzales)

The Struggle

How cool is this tee?! I really like the powerful message of perseverance. It’s a very iconic design I think. It’s almost like our hero needs to reach the other side of the wall at any cost and without regard for what may await him.

Check out Coty’s original post
Check out The Struggle ($22) at Miles to Go

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Tuesday, October 6th 2009 - 9:34 am - T-Shirt Link Tuesday

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