T-shirt Printing in Davao City


Call us now!
Landline: (082) 2939694
Mobile: 09328708744

Email: xdsalesdavao@gmail.com
Address: Door 3-Don Mariano Bldg., Ponciano Street ( Fronting Kapt. Tomas Monteverde Elem. School) Davao City, Philippines




For accurate & fast estimates, please message us in facebook with these details:

1.Design
2.Quantity
3.Deadline
4.Your contact nos.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

NEXT EVENT: PALARONG PAMBANSA '09-Tacloban City

This year's biggest athletic event will be held in Tacloban City. As usual,for the 4th time, Xtreme Designs will be heading to the host city a week earlier the opening of the event which will take place on April 28, 2009.
This time, we got lot of items to be sold from our 4 booths. Unlike last year's Palarong Pambansa in Palawan which we only focused on t-shirts. Now, we will be selling plastic keychains, mugs, button pins and mini-shirts.
We also got new interesting t-shirt designs but still, last year's hottest designs will be displayed. Though we heard that some of it were copied by our competitors, we're very confident that nobody makes it better than us...because we are the original and they just imitate.
So to all our regular costumers, see you in Tacloban!

Watch out for our new designs...i'll be posting it here next week!

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Our Projects

Sunstar Cebu

Thursday, January 15, 2009
source:http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/ceb/2009/01/15/bus/vendors.blame.downtown.night.bazaar.for.low.christmas.sales..html

SINULOG 2009 Bazaar participants along Osmeña Blvd. are putting their hopes on this weekend’s festivities to increase their revenues and make up for last month’s low sales.

Among them is Glenn Baratbate, proprietor of Davao-based t-shirt printing business called Xtreme Designs that has been participating in the annual bazaar for four consecutive years.

Compared to the previous years, Baratbate said his stall had experienced low sales since it opened on Dec. 1, 2008. Xtreme Designs’ stall pays P70,000 as rent for the two-month Sinulog Bazaar.

He said he used to earn an average of P10,000 a day, especially during Christmas and Sinulog. Nowadays, he earns only about P3,000 a day.

He said the low sales turnout could be blamed more on the presence of the night market in Colon rather than the impact of the global financial crisis on consumers.

“Instead of buyers coming here, they will go straight there (Colon) because of its accessibility and the presence of neighboring establishments,” he said.

Baratbate also cited competition among vendors at the Sinulog Foundation Inc.-sponsored bazaar where there are at least five t-shirt printers.

He said that his best sales was in 2007, during the Association of South East Asian Nations summit, due to the high influx of tourists coming to buy various souvenir items.

Xtreme Designs sells t-shirts and novelty products with original designs. It offers various services, like t-shirt printing, desktop publishing and tarpaulin printing, among others.

The prices of its t-shirts with “ordinary” designs would range from P130 for women to P150 for men while garments with “metallic” designs cost P180 for women and P200 for men.

“We did not increase the prices even when the cost of our equipment increased because we still want to offer affordable and quality shirts,” Baratbate said.

He and his staff, hoping for bigger sales over the weekend, are already stocking up their shelves in time for the Sinulog Festival.

Like Baratbate, Jenny Solmayor who sells shoes, also attributed this year’s low sales to competition and to sidewalk vendors who are not renting but would find spaces near the bazaar to sell.

But Emma Aniñon believes the global financial crisis prompted consumers to become wise spenders.

Aniñon is selling native products and souvenir items at the Sinulog 2009 Bazaar for the first time, but she maintains a small stall near the Basilica del Sto. Niño.

This mother of five would earn P5,000 to P10,000 in sales from the two stalls toward Christmas and New Year. Now, she would be thankful to earn about P500 a day.

Locals would buy bracelets, necklaces and earrings while tourists would purchase souvenir items from her.

“I am still grateful for this space (along Osmeña Blvd.) since it would be hard for us to sell near the Basilica during the festival without people trampling on our products due to the thick crowd of devotees,” she said in Bisaya.

She added that she is looking forward to the Sinulog Festival on Sunday when a huge number of visitors are expected to participate in street parties and other activities along Osmeña Blvd.

HALALAN 2010

HALALAN 2010
halalan 2010