A few years ago, if a business wanted branded clothing, printed t-shirts, embroidered polos, workwear with a logo, it usually meant a slow process. You’d contact a local printer, wait for a quote, commit to a minimum order of a hundred or more units, and hope the colours matched what you had in mind. It wasn’t something most small businesses bothered with unless they had to.
That’s changed. Custom apparel has quietly turned into one of the more active corners of UK ecommerce, with businesses of every size ordering printed and embroidered clothing directly online, in small batches, without ever speaking to a salesperson. It’s worth looking at why this shift happened and what it means for the businesses buying into it.
Why demand for custom clothing has grown
Part of it is straightforward. More businesses exist online than ever before, and a business that exists mostly on a screen has fewer chances to build a physical presence. Branded clothing is one of the few tools left that gives a business something tangible, staff wearing a logo at an event, a hoodie sent out as part of an order, a uniform that makes a small team look established rather than improvised.
The other part is cost. Printing technology has moved on from the days when screen printing was the only realistic option for putting a design on fabric. Digital and DTF (direct-to-film) printing now allow full colour, detailed designs on individual garments without the setup costs that used to make small orders expensive per unit. A business ordering five printed t-shirts pays a sensible price per item rather than being quoted as if they were ordering five hundred.
Where embroidery still wins over print
Print gets most of the attention because it’s flexible and cheap for small runs, but embroidery hasn’t gone anywhere, and for certain products it’s still the better option. Anything that gets worn regularly and washed often, polo shirts, workwear, caps, holds up better with embroidery than with a printed design, which can crack or fade after repeated washing.
There’s also a perception difference. An embroidered logo on a polo shirt or jacket tends to read as more established and more premium than a printed one, which is why a lot of trades businesses, hospitality staff uniforms, and corporate teams still choose it even though it costs a little more per item. Businesses working through embroidered workwear and uniforms tend to be looking for something that needs to last a year or two of regular wear rather than a design meant for a one-off event or campaign.
Small batch ordering has changed who can access this
The real shift in this space isn’t the printing technology itself, it’s what that technology has done to minimum order quantities. A small ecommerce brand launching a limited hoodie drop, a startup ordering ten polo shirts for its first team photo, a local gym wanting branded t-shirts for a dozen staff, none of these would have been realistic to fulfil affordably five years ago. Now they’re standard orders for a lot of UK print and embroidery suppliers.
This matters for ecommerce specifically because it lowers the barrier for online stores to add apparel as a product line or a brand extension without carrying stock risk. A store that sells skincare or supplements can now test a small run of branded merchandise as an add-on, see how customers respond, and reorder only if it performs, rather than committing to a warehouse of unsold stock upfront.
What businesses are actually ordering
The mix of what gets ordered has shifted too. It used to be dominated by two things: workwear for trades businesses and event t-shirts for one-off campaigns. Now the categories are broader and include things like staff uniforms for hospitality and retail, branded merchandise sent out with online orders, limited edition apparel drops tied to a product launch, and personalised clothing for gifting, things like a printed hoodie or hat made to order rather than picked from a generic catalogue.
That last category has grown especially fast. Personalisation used to mean choosing from a small set of pre-made designs. Now it’s common for a customer to upload their own design, or ask for a name and number printed on a garment, and get it back within a few days rather than weeks. Options for personalised t-shirts built around this kind of quick customer-facing printing have become one of the more requested services from smaller UK sellers who want to offer personalisation without setting up their own printing equipment.
What to actually check before choosing a supplier
For a business dipping into custom apparel for the first time, a few things tend to separate a good order from a disappointing one.
Ask about minimum order quantities upfront, rather than assuming. Some suppliers still hold onto older minimums for certain print types even if they advertise small batch printing generally, so it’s worth confirming before committing to a design.
Check turnaround time against your actual need date. Embroidery generally takes longer to set up than print because of the digitising process, so if there’s a deadline involved, print may be the more realistic choice even if embroidery would look better long term.
Ask for a sample before a full run if the order is large or the design is detailed. Colours on screen rarely match exactly to fabric, and it’s a lot cheaper to find that out on one sample garment than on fifty.
Think about fabric weight and fit, not just the design. A hoodie that’s too thin or a t-shirt with a boxy fit will get worn less regardless of how good the print looks, and a garment nobody wears isn’t doing the brand any favours sitting in a drawer.
Where this is heading
Custom apparel isn’t a passing trend tied to one printing technology, it’s settling into being a permanent, accessible category that ecommerce businesses can use the way they’d use packaging or email marketing, as a normal part of building a brand rather than an occasional splurge. As small batch printing keeps getting cheaper and turnaround times keep shrinking, it’s likely more online stores will treat branded apparel as a standard product line rather than a one-off idea, whether that’s merchandise sent with orders, staff uniforms, or personalised pieces made for individual customers.
For UK businesses testing this for the first time, the safest starting point is usually a small trial order through a supplier that handles both print and embroidery in-house, so there’s room to compare which method actually suits the product before scaling anything up.












































































