Employees: Founders are both full time and they have one, part-time employee. The pitch: We buy far more T-shirts in the U.S. than we’ll ever need, and many of those shirts wind up donated to ...
WASHINGTON — We’ve all got them, old tee shirts that we will never wear again but we just can’t bring ourselves to get rid of. Whether they hold sentimental value, or you just love the look of them, ...
There is a way to turn that mountain of unused t-shirts accumulated through various travels into something you will cherish and actually use. Project Repat will take your T-shirts and turn them into ...
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) — We all have those favorite t-shirts from events that are hard to let go of but are taking up space! Here is a solution, called Project Repat and joining us with more is CEO ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Boston-based Project Repat, a company that turns old T ...
When Ross Lohr and Nathan Rothstein founded Project Repat in February 2012, they wanted to prevent retailers and consumers alike from sending used T-shirts to landfills to go to waste. Six years later ...
Local restaurateur and chef, Jason Santos has opened a new restaurant in Boston, and Project Repat will help you find a use for your favorite old shirts. In the heart of the Seaport, One Seaport…two ...
FALL RIVER — Let’s just admit it: America has a T-shirt problem. You are still denying this? How does two billion T-shirts a year sound to you. Two billion. A year. But there is help — as close as ...
FALL RIVER (CBS) - A company known for giving new life to old T-shirts is now working to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Project Repat got started back in 2012 as a way to keep T-shirts out of ...
For Neal Venancio, owner of Precision Sportswear, the North American Free Trade Agreement was a disaster. The cut-and-sew shop in Fall River employed 60 workers when he bought it in 1993, but as his ...
A Boston company that turns people’s T-shirts into quilts is suing its former video production firm in U.S. District Court, claiming it used its trade secrets to start a rival T-shirt quilt maker.
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