Most car club logos look fine on a computer screen and fall apart on apparel. The issues are predictable: line weights too thin for embroidery, too many colors for screen print, typography that does not read at 6 feet. The five rules below come from working with hundreds of club logos through the apparel production process. Get these right and the logo works across every garment in the shop.
The hat is the smallest application for a car club logo. Front-panel embroidery on a snapback is typically 2.5 inches wide. If the logo holds up at 2.5 inches in stitch, it holds up everywhere else (chest print, back panel, sleeve hit).
The mistake most new clubs make: design the logo at full back-panel size, then try to shrink it for hats. Details that worked at 10 inches across disappear at 2.5 inches. Better approach: design at 2.5 inches first, prove it reads, then scale up.
Screen printing and embroidery both get more complicated, more expensive, and less consistent as color count rises. Three colors maximum is the working rule for car club logos.
One color, two colors, or three colors all work cleanly. Four colors is borderline and increases the chance of misalignment. Five-plus colors is a logo built for digital use, not for apparel production. If the digital version of the logo has many colors, build a simplified two- or three-color apparel variant for actual production.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.Thin lines disappear in stitch. They also fade fast in screen print after wash cycles. Heavy, chunky line weights hold up across both methods.
The test: at the hat-front size (2.5 inches wide), the thinnest line in the design should still be visible at 6 feet. If it disappears, thicken it. Logos that look "refined and elegant" on screen often need to be heavier for apparel. The apparel logo is not the same as the digital logo.
The club name is what members and outsiders read. A heavy, distinctive wordmark with the right typeface choice does more for club identity than a detailed car illustration. Many of the best club logos are typography-driven with minimal illustration.
What the typeface signals:
Before printing the full club apparel order, test the logo:
A one-shirt and one-hat test costs less than $50 and saves the club from committing a logo that does not work to a full member roster.
Order a single test shirt and hat through the shop. See how the logo actually prints before committing the full club roster. No minimum.
Start FreeWe do not ship pre-made templates because clubs deserve original identity. Brief a designer with your aesthetic direction (heritage, modern, lowrider, JDM, etc.) or use a free logo tool to draft a starting point. Test on a single shirt and hat before committing to the full apparel order.
Three colors maximum for apparel production. One, two, or three colors all work cleanly across screen print and embroidery. Four-plus colors increase production complexity and the chance of misalignment.
Design at the smallest application size first (typically 2.5 inches wide for hat-front embroidery). If the logo holds up at 2.5 inches with all details readable, it scales up cleanly to chest prints and back panels.