The success of crowdsourcing shows that people want to express themselves, said Jake Nickell, the founder of Threadless. He started the company in 2000 as a hobby, and it now generates more than $38 ...
If you’ve never heard of the threadless ball screw, which was invented over sixty years ago, [Angus] of Maker’s Muse has a video demonstrating the whole thing, covering its history and showcasing both ...
It's been ten years since Jake Nickell started the little online t-shirt design contest that would explode into the $20 million+ brand called Threadless, subject of a Harvard Business School case ...
CHICAGO, IL--(Marketwired - Apr 23, 2014) - Threadless, the global design community, today introduced new artist-friendly terms that grant artists all rights to their work through a non-exclusive ...
[2n2r5] posted up a mechanism that we’d never seen before — a threadless ballscrew that turns rotational into linear motion with no backlash. It works by pressing the edge of three bearings fairly ...
Threadless, a Chicago T-shirt company, sprang to life a decade ago with the idea that employees and customers don't have to be two distinct groups. The Internet-based company asks consumers to submit ...
For many trained, creative photographers, taking product shots may seem like the equivalent of earning a culinary degree only to flip burgers at a fast-food chain. It’s not exactly the most ...
Spaceport, the universal intellectual property licensing platform, has launched Threadless t-shirts and apparel on the Roblox Marketplace. This launch opens new opportunities for both Threadless and ...
Ten years ago, a guy named Jake Nickell won an online t-shirt design competition. He was so excited about winning that he and a friend Jacob DeHart set up their own online contest, pooling some money ...
Joining a long list of collaborators, intellectual property licensing platform Spaceport and e-commerce company Threadless have introduced Threadless T-shirts and apparel on Roblox, the companies ...
Designers love creating homages to their favorite Disney characters (e.g., turning the iconic princesses into zombies and hipsters), but if they ever tried to sell those designs they would be faced ...
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