Truck club apparel has to do two things: signal the make (Ford, Chevy, Ram, Toyota, or mixed-make crew) without using trademarked logos, and survive the jobsite wear that a lot of truck crew members put their apparel through during the week. Bear Grips Pro Shops produces custom truck club apparel in heavyweight cotton and performance fabrics with no minimum order.
The legal line: you cannot put the Ford Blue Oval, the Chevy Bowtie, the Ram horn, or the Toyota TRD wordmark on club apparel. Those are trademarked and the manufacturer enforcement is active.
What works instead: brand-adjacent design language. Color palettes that signal the make (Ford blue, Chevy gold and red, Toyota tan and military green). Truck silhouettes that read as the model without using the official logo. Year-and-model text ("1995-2024 OBS Crew" or "Toyota Tacoma Coalition") that names the make in a descriptive context rather than as a trademark use.
The result reads correctly to club members and the public, and stays out of trademark territory. This is how legitimate truck clubs have built apparel programs for decades.
Color is the fastest signal of make in truck club apparel:
A lot of truck club members are in trades: construction, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, contracting. The club shirt is not just a weekend show garment, it gets worn at work too. That means the shirt has to hold up to actual labor: drywall dust, paint, sealant, sweat, and weekly wash cycles.
Heavyweight 100% cotton tees or cotton-poly blends survive that wear better than light triblend fabrics. The Bear Grips Airlume Athletic Tee and the Premium Cotton Crew Tee are the default work-and-weekend club shirts. The print stays sharp through the wash, and the body fabric holds shape after a year of daily wear.
Truck clubs that host annual shows or cruise events use apparel as both club identity and event merch. Two pricing approaches that work:
| Show Attendees | Event Shirts Sold | Avg Markup | Event Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 200 | 50 | $12 | $600 |
| 500 | 120 | $12 | $1,440 |
| 1,000 | 250 | $12 | $3,000 |
Upload the design with your make-signaling palette, pick the shirts and hats, and the truck club shop is live. No minimum.
Start FreeNo. Those are trademarked manufacturer logos. What works instead: brand-adjacent design language with make-signaling color palettes, truck silhouettes that read as the model without using the official logo, and year-and-model descriptive text.
Heavyweight 100% cotton tees in the Bear Grips Airlume Athletic Tee or Premium Cotton Crew Tee. Holds the print through daily wash, survives drywall dust and paint, and stays in shape after a year of work-and-weekend wear.
Yes. Mixed-make crews typically use black or charcoal bases with a neutral club logo that signals truck-crew identity without anchoring to a specific manufacturer. The shop can also offer make-specific color variants for members who want to signal their truck.