Pageant and ambassador programs tied to a school, homecoming court, a junior miss or distinguished young woman program, a student ambassador role, spend most of the year in ordinary clothes, not the sash and gown from the crowning event. A titleholder still shows up at school assemblies, parades, and community appearances dozens of times over the year, and a simple printed tee or hoodie with the title and year gives them something to actually wear to those events.
To be direct about scope: Bear Grips Pro Shops prints tees, hoodies, and hats. It does not produce sashes, crowns, or formal competition wardrobe pieces. What a titleholder gets from a custom apparel store is the everyday layer, a hoodie for a cold parade morning, a tee for a school visit, that carries their title and year between the formal events.
Simple layouts work best: the program name and school mascot on the front, the titleholder's name and title year on the back or sleeve. Programs running a full court often print one shared front design and vary only the back text (Homecoming Queen, First Runner-Up, Ambassador) so every member of the court gets a piece that reads as theirs.
Most pageant courts are small, sometimes a single titleholder, sometimes a court of 5-10. Since there is no minimum order, a program can order exactly one hoodie for a single titleholder or one design across a ten-person court without any bulk pricing negotiation.
Personalized tees and hoodies with title and year. No minimum, order one piece or a full court.
Start FreeNo. The catalog is printed apparel only, tees, hoodies, hats, and similar items. Sashes and crowns are formal pageant regalia and not something an apparel print store produces.
Yes. A shared front design with a personalized back (name and title) is the most common approach for a court.
No. A single hoodie for one titleholder costs the same base price per piece as a larger order.
About a week from order to door. Order at least two weeks ahead of a known appearance date to leave buffer.