Handmade in York, PA — Each Piece One of a Kind
5 min read
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Food truck merchandise and branded apparel for pop-up shops and market vendors sits in a category most large print shops overlook. The order quantities are smaller. The designs are often detailed and colorful: think hand-lettered food truck logos with illustrations of tacos, brisket, or artisan coffee. The timeline is tight because vendors are planning around their next event, not a quarterly marketing calendar. Big promotional products companies are not built for this work. I am.
I started Floorboard Findings as a one-person operation selling at markets and through Etsy, so I understand the vendor world from the inside. I know what it is like to need branded merchandise that represents your business well without ordering 500 pieces you cannot store in your truck or booth. I know that your logo probably has more detail and color than a simple corporate mark, and I know that your timeline revolves around the next festival, farmers market, or pop-up event — not a 6-week production schedule.
DTF (Direct-to-Film) transfers are the print method that makes branded merchandise for food trucks, pop-ups, and market vendors practical. Here is why.
Food-related designs are inherently colorful and detailed. A taco truck logo might include an illustrated taco with 15 shades of color, hand-lettered text, and decorative elements. A coffee roaster's brand might feature a detailed bean illustration with gradient shading. A bakery pop-up might want photographic images of their signature pastries on a tee. Screen printing charges per color, which makes these designs prohibitively expensive at small quantities. DTF prints in full CMYK plus white — unlimited colors at no extra per-color cost. Your 15-color illustrated logo costs the same to print as a simple 2-color text mark.
The prints are also soft and flexible. They bond to the fabric fibers under heat and pressure, creating a result rated for 50-plus washes. Your food truck tee will survive the same abuse as the rest of your work gear: grease splatters, hot kitchen environments, and weekly washing included.
Matching shirts for your food truck crew or market booth team create instant professionalism. Customers can identify who works there. Your team looks cohesive. And every photo taken at your truck or booth, by you or by customers, includes your branding. I print crew shirts on Comfort Colors 1717 for the soft, garment-dyed feel or Bella Canvas 3001 for a more fitted, modern look. Darker colorways work best for food service since they hide the inevitable stains better than white.
Selling branded tees at your truck, booth, or pop-up is a revenue stream that costs you almost nothing in overhead. You already have the foot traffic. Customers who love your food, your coffee, or your product want to rep your brand — give them something worth buying. A custom graphic tee on a premium blank with your full-color logo becomes a walking advertisement that the customer paid you to create. That is marketing that generates revenue instead of costing it.
Music festivals, food truck rallies, seasonal markets, holiday pop-ups. Special events are opportunities for limited-edition merchandise that creates urgency. An event-specific tee that is only available at that one festival drives sales in the moment and becomes a collectible for repeat customers. DTF makes short-run event designs practical because there are no per-color setup fees eating into your margins on a 24-piece run.
This is where working with a small studio has a real advantage over larger operations. My minimum order is 12 pieces per style, and you can mix sizes within that minimum. For a food truck that needs 12 crew shirts or a pop-up vendor testing merchandise with a small initial run, that minimum is realistic and manageable.
Turnaround is typically 1 to 2 weeks from design approval. For vendors with a specific event date, I plan production around your timeline. You will not be waiting 4 to 6 weeks wondering if your shirts will arrive before the festival.
Reorders are simple. I keep your design files and press settings on record, so when you sell out at a Saturday market and need another 24 tees, restocking is as easy as sending me a message with the sizes you need.
The smoother the process, the faster you get your merchandise. Here is what helps:
Your logo file. Vector formats (AI, EPS, SVG) or high-resolution PNGs at 300 DPI produce the best prints. If all you have is a JPEG from your Instagram profile, I can work with it, and artwork cleanup is included with every order. But better source files mean sharper results.
Blank and color preferences. If you know you want black tees with a full-front print, great. If you are not sure, I will walk you through options and can send blank samples so you can feel the fabric before committing.
Size breakdown. For crew shirts, get sizes from your team before ordering. For merchandise to sell, I recommend a standard distribution weighted toward medium through XL. Your customer demographic will guide the exact split.
Your timeline. If you have an event date, share it upfront so I can plan production around it.
I built my business the same way many food truck owners and market vendors build theirs: one customer at a time, showing up consistently, and making something I am proud to put my name on. I understand the grind because I have lived it. When you order custom branded merchandise from Floorboard Findings, you are working with someone who gets the vendor world, not a faceless print shop that treats your 24-piece order as an afterthought.
Browse our custom graphic tee options, explore our DTF transfer capabilities, or reach out directly to start a conversation. Your brand deserves to be on a shirt that does it justice, and your customers are already waiting to buy one.

Maria Budziszewski
Owner & Creator
Every piece is hand-dyed with care in York, PA. From ice dye hoodies to crystal jewelry, each item is crafted to be one-of-a-kind.
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