Neumatic T-shirts

If anyone would like to have a Neumatic T-Shirt please contact either myself or Dale via Private Message. You can contact Dale, but he will just send it to me anyway, so don’t bother him, he has way way too many mat orders. (Unless of course you don’t already have a mat, then, by all means contact Dale and place an order.)

They come in L and XL and I think are really nice.

(Sorry to the few of you out there that already have them.)

Tim

Can you post a pic of the design/t-shirt?

Quote:

They come in L and XL and I think are really nice.

a representation fo the average mat rider?

Whew, for a moment I was thinking blow-up t-shirts.

Gotta fill that hole in the quiver soon!

It would help to know: how much it’ll cost including shipping; what colors they come in; whether it’s a front or back print; how long we’ll have to wait for it; (oh yea) what the design looks like. Once that becomes known, then I’ll probably order one.

color white shirt (beefy tee so it is good quality) with process blue logo on front left chest and across back (Dale provided the logo and color choice…it looks good)

sizes are L and XL (maybe the people that have bought them can comment on size, they seem true to size to me though)

Prices include shipping and handling.

1 = $19

2 = $18each

3 = $17each

wait is as long as it takes me to get the $ and the USPS to deliver it

hope this helps

tim

I would buy one. Details?

Wouldnt an inflatable shirt work pretty good when body surfing?

http://mail.sportsstuff.com/towables/concepts/sumo/index.shtml#

Dale, if those are the “L” size, i thing they will fit as i asked Tim…

Send a couple to Europe!

Quote:

The SleepingBagDress prototype developed by Ana Rewakowicz allows you to inflate a convenient sleeping bag around you once the day is through. Uniblow Outfits, one of her other works, are made from rubber latex and shoe pumps and inflate as you walk around, allowing you to fall down with abandon and appear only marginally retarded. “The artist’s concept evolves around the idea of clothing as portable architecture and brings our individual needs to the basic, everyday experience of survival and “you never know WEAR?” situations.”