Goodfibres is a website made for artists by artists - have you checked out the Goodfibres community? Our mission is to give exposure to talented artists by providing a platform to showcase their designs to a worldwide audience. When you submit your designs you will receive feedback from other artists so that you can improve your craft and make friends with other talented individuals.
Popular designs will be printed on clothing to achieve three goals:
1. Exposure of your artwork to the masses where you receive payment on every sale made
2. Your work helps to make the world a better place as we donate an additional shirt for each sale to charities and to those less fortunate
3. Style people out in cool and ethical clothing designed by artists worldwide
But most importantly, every Goodfibres design that we print is still owned by the artist (that’s right, the artist always maintains the rights to their intellectual property).
In addition to this, we work toward promoting you, the artist, not just the T-shirts, through interviews on our magazine and mentions and promotion on Twitter, Facebook and other social media websites as well. We want to help build exposure for your work and awareness of your talent. All the artist has to do is to present and promote themselves by submitting designs and having their friends and peers comment on their work. We want to keep it simple. Our seamless easy-to-use web-shop takes care of everything from showcasing artwork and products to back-end stuff like warehouse storage, sales and returns so that you can focus on your creativity.
And the best part, it’s for a good cause – each individual artist’s goal helps to reinforce a collective goal of using art to make a positive impact in the world. We do this by donating a T-shirt for every one sold to a community in need, as part of the Goodfibres philosophy. As we grow, our aim is to buy food, medicine and water for these communities as well. We want a fair system that benefits the customer, the artist and people in need. It works like this: