Car Club Back Panel Designs and Layouts
Quick Answer- Three back-panel formats: rocker, central crest, and tour-tee list.
- Layout proportions that read at 30 feet across a show parking lot.
- Chapter and location rocker text for multi-region clubs.
- Garments and ink choices that hold the print cleanly.
Car club back panel designs are the most-read piece of club apparel in any show parking lot. The shirt or hoodie is what visitors see from a distance, and the back panel layout determines whether the club identity reads at 30 feet or only at 3 feet. Three formats consistently work, and the proportions are what separate a clean back panel from one that looks awkward.
Format 1: Top Rocker, Center Emblem, Bottom Rocker
The classic car club back panel layout. Three elements:
- Top rocker: Club name in a curved arc across the upper back, sitting just below the shoulder seam. Bold, readable from a distance. Typeface choice carries the club aesthetic (script for lowrider, slab serif for vintage, block sans for modern crews).
- Center emblem: The club crest, car illustration, or central icon. Sits between the shoulder blades. Roughly 8 to 10 inches across for a standard adult tee.
- Bottom rocker: Chapter location, year established, or club tagline in a curved arc at the bottom of the print area. Smaller than the top rocker but still readable.
Borrowed loosely from motorcycle club tradition. Reads as institutional and earned.
Format 2: Central Wordmark Plus Year Established
Cleaner, more modern back panel format. Two elements:
- Central wordmark: Club name in large, bold typography. Centered between the shoulder blades. The wordmark itself is the design.
- Year established underneath: "EST. [year]" in smaller text below the wordmark. Adds legitimacy without crowding.
Works well for clubs with a strong typographic identity and no need for the full rocker treatment. Reads more as streetwear-influenced and less as traditional car club.
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Format 3: Tour Tee List
Borrowed from band merch. The back panel lists meets, shows, or runs the club attended in a given year, formatted like a tour date list:
- Top: club name and year ("Northeast Drift Coalition 2024 Season")
- Middle: list of meets and events with dates and locations
- Bottom: optional tagline or "Thanks to everyone who came out"
Year-end shirt format. Functions as a year-in-review garment. Members buy it once per year and the design changes annually with the new season's event list.
Proportions That Read at 30 Feet
The back panel print area on a standard adult tee is roughly 12 inches wide by 14 inches tall. Layout proportions that work:
- Top rocker: 10 to 11 inches wide, 1.5 to 2 inches tall. Sits about 2 inches below the collar.
- Center emblem: 7 to 9 inches across. Centered between top and bottom rockers, between the shoulder blades.
- Bottom rocker: 8 to 10 inches wide, 1 to 1.5 inches tall. Sits about 1 inch above the hem print area.
For larger sizes (2XL, 3XL), the print scales up proportionally. Most US print partners handle this automatically. For youth and women's cuts, the print scales down to fit the smaller print area.
Build the Back Panel for the Club Shop
Upload your back-panel artwork, pick the tee and hoodie, and members order through the link. No minimum, US-printed, ships in about a week.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the standard car club back panel size?
Roughly 11 inches wide by 13 inches tall for the full print area on a standard adult tee. Top rocker around 10 inches wide, center emblem 7 to 9 inches across, bottom rocker 8 to 10 inches wide. Scales proportionally for larger and smaller sizes.
Can the back panel rocker text be customized per chapter?
Yes. The club uploads the base back-panel design and adds chapter variants with the bottom rocker text swapped per chapter location. Same shop URL, different chapter rocker per variant.
How many colors should a back-panel design have?
Two to three colors maximum for screen print legibility. Single-color white-on-black or yellow-on-black layouts hold up best at distance and over time. Multi-color back panels work but add cost and complexity.
Laila HassanBeauty and Lifestyle Studio Owner
Laila owns a salon and lifestyle studio in Miami after a decade in beauty industry sales. She writes about salon and spa branding, staff presentation, and the lifestyle-business apparel programs that turn customers into regulars.
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